Max von Sydow,
Dorothy McGuire,
Robert Loggia,
Claude Rains,
José Ferrer
... see more
Filmmaker George Stevens chose Monument Valley, Utah for his exterior sequences in The Greatest Story Ever Told, this ($20 million) adaptation of Fulton Oursler's best-selling book. The "Greatest Stor... read more
Directed by: George Stevens, David Lean, Jean Negulesco
Release Date: February 15, 1965
DVD Release Date: March 6, 2001
Stats: 393 reviews
Your Rating
Flixster Reviews (393)
-
April 13, 2009
An overly long version of Christ's story. Von Sydow is great as Jesus, but hearing the Duke's voice as the Centurion pissed me off for some reason.
-
April 23, 2008
love these top heavy with stars juggernauts they tossed at you to try to get you out from in front of your teevee sets! and this one drips with maybe too much reverence, and how, oh how can you do that?
-
March 31, 2012
No wonder Max von Sydow's dies so much onscreen; he recreated the deaths to end all deaths, or sins, rather, and after that, you can expect that to show up on your resume. Yeah, I know that it looks as though he's the only Jesus that's dying all the time, but really, Willem Dafoe... read more
-
August 6, 2009
Really long, but pretty accurate telling of Jesus's life, from birth to death. Definitely recommend it.
-
May 6, 2009
what an amazingly uninteresting epic. even in almost 3 1/2 hours, the characters remain flat and virtually void of personality. creative liberties are plentiful in combining and slightly altering various story elements, and the writing--in its attempt to be reverent and scriptu... read more
-
May 6, 2009
This movie is pretty much bibically correct. It is however, a very boring movie with good intentions.
-
March 9, 2009
Never has any one given so much or suffered so much or affected so many lives as this one man. JESUS my savior and LORD
-
December 7, 2008
Any movie that is an adaption of the Bible is not going to be easy to make but this one does a very good job. It is a classic not because it is about our Saviour but because it very good film making.
Critic Reviews
By reputation, the results are so dull and so consistently undercut by a succession of star cameos that no one seems to mind the various shorter versions released since them, one of them less than hal... Full Review
Mr. Stevens has done it in a generous and often stunning style. And the quality of his reverence should captivate the piously devout. Full Review
Hammy performances by Charlton Heston as John the Baptist, Telly Savalas as Pilate, and, in the most notorious bit of casting, John Wayne(!) as a Roman soldier overseeing the crucifixion ("Truly, this... Full Review
Tends to degenerate into a series of increasingly bizarre walk-ons. Full Review
Wile it's not quite as bad as the critics claimed upon its release, it's not particularly good either. Full Review
Despite some rousing scenes, may be the most boring movie ever made ...
If this is the greatest story ever told I can imagine how horrid is the worst story ever told. Full Review
Yes, the celebrity cameos distract, but the film focuses more on Jesus' message than the overated King of Kings If you've never seen it in widescreen, you are missing a revelation.
Critic ratings and reviews powered by RottenTomatoes.com
Fresh (60% or more critics rated the movie positively)
Rotten (59% or fewer critics rated the movie positively)
















