The Prince Of Egypt Moses Here

If there is a flaw, it's that the film rushes slightly through the 40-year wilderness period. We see Moses as a shepherd for about two minutes before the burning bush. A bit more time with him in exile would have deepened his transformation from prince to shepherd to prophet. Also, the film ends at the Red Sea; we don't see the flawed, frustrated Moses of the later Exodus years. But within the scope of this story, it works perfectly.

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The sequence where Moses processes this truth is a masterclass in visual storytelling. He flees back to the palace, seeking comfort in the familiar architecture of his childhood. Instead, he finds himself staring at a massive wall mural depicting the slaughter of the Hebrew newborn boys—the very decree that forced his biological mother to place him in a basket on the Nile. Moses is forced to confront a horrifying paradox: If there is a flaw, it's that the