

Ben-Hur (2016)
In order to revenge from his adopted brother, who works as an officer in the Roman army, who makes a conspiracy against his brother, Judah Ben-Hur, an honest strong and kindhearted prince, who for the false accusation of treason, has left his own land, returns after many years of absence at sea.

















23 December 1991, Clifton, New Jersey, USA


16 January 1983, The Hague, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands

18 December 1969, Rieti, Italy

20 May 1966, Tbilisi, Georgian SSR, USSR [now Republic of Georgia]

22 August 1975, Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil


24 May 1948, Clydebank, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland, UK

28 June 1969, Tel Aviv, Israel


9 July 1982, Pontefract, Yorkshire, England, UK

2 March 1982, Copenhagen, Denmark



February 23, 2017
While it isn't a total disaster, the new Ben-Hur is unnecessary; the original still works as well as it did more than 50 years ago. This is nothing more than an action movie made for the new generations, which works for a while. [Full review in Spanish]
December 28, 2016
Rankly incompetent.
August 21, 2016
Something soulless and empty, with all the mystery and grandeur of the tale just gone.
August 19, 2016
Just because you're rolling in the chariot doesn't make you Charlton Heston. That's a lesson this weightless, instantly disposable remake of the 1959 sword-and-sandal Oscar winner learns the hard way.
August 21, 2016
An amateurish effort that boasts direct-to-video characteristics, the latest version disappoints in almost every production aspect.
August 19, 2016
Ben-Hur has clearly been designed and marketed to feed the appetite for projects with a spiritual foundation. Beyond the merits of that concept, though, there's precious little to celebrate creatively speaking.
August 20, 2016
The last of the summer's movie epics is a digitalized eyesore hobbled in every department by staggering incompetence.
January 08, 2017
Just as Bekmambetov can't wrangle the story into a palatable feature, neither can his largely under-used actors.
August 25, 2016
Though it seems unlikely to dislodge William Wyler's 1959 version, its story of a Judean prince (Jack Huston) who keeps running into Jesus of Nazareth (Rodrigo Santoro) offers plenty of action and spectacle.
December 06, 2016
The big budget, costume epic might be due for a comeback, but this anemic and unimaginative exercise isn't going to do it.