The.prince.of.egypt.1998 Apr 2026

Then, there is the Red Sea. For five minutes, the film stops being a cartoon and becomes a symphony of destruction and salvation. As Moses raises his staff, the water doesn’t just part; it explodes outward in towering, translucent cathedrals of blue and green. The animators used fluid dynamics and hand-drawn layers to create a wall of water that feels both beautiful and terrifying. When the waves crash back down upon the Egyptian army, it is not a victory lap. The film pauses to show the silent horror of the drowning soldiers—a choice that earned it both praise and a PG rating, cementing its refusal to sugarcoat the story. No discussion of The Prince of Egypt is complete without acknowledging its divine musical pedigree. Stephen Schwartz ( Godspell , Wicked ) wrote the lyrics, while Hans Zimmer composed the score. Together, they created a soundscape that blends Hebrew liturgy, African gospel, and Middle Eastern instrumentation.

As Moses descends from Mount Sinai at the film’s close, carrying the tablets, his face scarred by the presence of the divine, the film offers no tidy resolution. Only a shot of the horizon, and the promise of a future still being written. the.prince.of.egypt.1998

Then, from the upstart studio DreamWorks SKG—founded by Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg, and David Geffen—came a film that dared to do the impossible. It took the most sacred, and potentially controversial, story in the Old Testament—the Book of Exodus—and turned it into a sweeping, operatic epic. No talking camels. No comic relief hyenas. Just plagues, divine wrath, and a profound meditation on faith, freedom, and the cost of leadership. Then, there is the Red Sea

But the film’s true visual genius is revealed in its two most famous sequences. The animators used fluid dynamics and hand-drawn layers

“Deliver Us,” the opening number, is a harrowing slave lament. As the Hebrew women sing a call-and-response while staggering under heavy stones, Zimmer’s score introduces a mournful shofar (a ram’s horn). It is a far cry from “Hakuna Matata.”