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Hero Overview

Yes, Aaron, it's true. Pharaoh has the power. He can take away your food, your home, your freedom. He can take away your sons and daughters. With one word: Pharaoh can take away your very lives. But there is one thing he cannot take away from you: Your faith. Believe. For we will see God's wonders.
~ Moses encouraging the Hebrews to believe.
Goodbye brother...
~ Moses' last words to his adoptive brother, Rameses, before he and his people leave Egypt behind and set off on their journey to the Promised Land.

Moses is the titular main protagonist of DreamWorks' 2nd full-length animated feature film The Prince of Egypt, a retelling of the Biblical Book of Exodus and it's musical. He is the second son and youngest child of Yocheved, the younger brother of Aaron and Miriam, the adoptive son of Pharaoh Seti and Queen Tuya, the adoptive younger brother of Rameses, the husband of Tzipporah and the son-in-law of Jethro.

He was voiced by Val Kilmer, who also voiced God in the same film, and also portrayed Chris Knight in Real Genius, Madmartigan in Willow and Batman in Batman Forever, and by Amick Byram for his singing voice (though his singing is in his head).

Personality[]

While growing up, Moses lived the carefree life of a prince. He was lively, rakish, and fun-loving. He was also very loving towards his "mother", Queen Tuya, his "father", Pharaoh Seti, and his "older brother", Rameses. However, Moses was also very privileged and insensitive towards those "beneath" him. He tended towards recklessness in addition to his good qualities.

But after God revealed to him his true heritage through a dream, Moses's personality underwent a change. He began to care about Hebrew slaves and became sensitive to his "superiority". When Moses escaped Egypt and lived in Midian, he became more responsible as a shepherd and care-giver to the people of Jethro's tribe.

After Moses was chosen by God to become the leader of the Hebrews, he had to adopt a more serious personality. Yet throughout the film, Moses maintains his loving nature and free-spirit.

Biography[]

Film[]

At the beginning of the film, Pharaoh Seti I orders that all the newborn Hebrew Baby Boys are killed to prevent the Hebrew population from overtaking that of the Egyptians. Seti feared that as the Hebrews grew in number, they would attempt to overthrow him. As the cries of mothers and babies echoed through Egypt, a Hebrew woman named Yocheved along with her daughter Miriam, and son Aaron, takes her newborn baby son to the Nile and place him in a basket.

Baby Moses

Baby Moses about be set adrift in his basket.

Yocheved, nearly pursued by Egyptian guards, kisses her child and desperately sends him down the river, in the hopes that he will find sanctuary somewhere else. The basket finds its way to the royal palace and is found by Seti's wife Queen Tuya, who is by the river with her young son Rameses and her servants. Tuya is smitten with the child she finds within and decides to keep him. Miriam, who followed the basket to the palace, finds her brother in a place of safety and prays that he will return to deliver the Hebrews out of Egypt. Queen Tuya names the boy Moses (which means "raised from the river").

Moses and Rameses chariot race

Moses and Rameses during their chariot racing.

Over the years, Moses grew up in a carefree life as a prince. One day, Moses (now approximately 18) and Rameses, were racing through the temple of Ra and made a mess of it. After being confronted by Seti, Rameses got in more trouble than Moses because he was next in line for the throne and Moses wasn't. After Rameses was called "a weak link in the chain" Moses asked Seti if Rameses could just have the opportunity to prove that he's worthy of the throne. Seti agreed and later that night, he made Rameses Prince Regent. It was also at the party that Moses meets a captured woman named Tzipporah who is presented to Rameses as a potential wife. Rameses gives her to Moses after she tries to bite him. Tzipporah is sent to Moses' room but she escapes and instead of turning her in, Moses lets her go and followed her till he met Miriam and Aaron. Miriam was excited to meet her long lost brother but Aaron didn't seem to recognized him. Miriam tries to explain that Moses is not actually a prince and that he was her brother but Moses doesn't know what she's talking about and refuse to believe her. Before he storms off, Miriam sings the lullaby Yocheved sang to him as a baby. Moses recognizes that and runs back to the palace in confusion. Moses then falls asleep and God showed what Pharaoh Seti did in the beginning of the film and when Moses wakes up he's shocked to find a carving of Seti ordering all the newborns to be thrown in the Nile on the wall. Pharaoh Seti guiltly explains why he did this and tells Moses that they were only slaves but Moses, greatly disturbed, pulls away from Seti and runs off in horror. Moses is then seen at the spot where he was found as a baby and Queen Tuya tells him that he is their son and they loved him, and that "the gods chose you so forget the truth." This doesn't help Moses very much either.

At the temple of Ra, Rameses is planning to redesign it and Moses saw all the hard working Hebrews but with a different impression. One elderly slave was being cruelly whipped by a guard. Moses was getting upset, trying to stop the guard, accidentally pushes him off the scaffolding; and the guard falls to his death. Shocked and horrified at what he just did Moses then tries to exile himself, but Rameses tries to tell him that he can change what happened. Moses does not care stating all the things that he's ever known to be true is a lie, and that he is not who Rameses thinks he is. When Rameses asks him what he is talking about, Moses tells Rameses to go ask Seti, the man he once called father. Rameses begs Moses to stay, but Moses sadly says goodbye to his brother before he runs away from Egypt.

Moses then travels the desert for a few days until a sand storm rolls in and buries him. A camel then takes a bite out of his hair, waking him up, and the leaves with a bag of water. In a lust for thirst, Moses follows the camel back to an oasis where he drinks the same water as the sheep. He then sees desert muggers picking on children and makes their camels run away free. Moses then accidentally falls down the well and the children try to get him out. Tzipporah arrives and helps but when she recognizes Moses, she drops him back down to the bottom of the well as pay back from their first meeting. Moses then spends a few years in the oasis and during that time, he and Tzipporah fell in love and were married. One day, while Moses was tending to the sheep, a lamb wandered into a cave and Moses follows it. Inside the cave is a bush burning cold fire and before Moses knew it, the bush spoke. It was God that was talking to him and He told Moses that He has heard the cries of the miserable Hebrews and He has chosen Moses and encourage him to bring his children out of Egypt. Moses at first refuses due to his past mistreatment of them but God assures him that He will be with him when he returns to Egypt and help him perform all His wonders. Moses listens and he and Tzipporah return to Egypt. Moses and Rameses (who is now Pharaoh and has a wife and young son) reunite after years of not seeing each other, but the reunion is short lived when Moses asks Rameses to let God's people go free. Rameses refuses and instead doubles the work load of the Hebrews (much to almost everyone's displease).

As Moses leaves the palace, a Hebrew man throws a handful of mud at him in disgust, knocking him to his knees. Now fearless of speaking back, Aaron confronts Moses and asks him how he likes it when he is struck to the ground. He accuses him of never caring about slaves until he realized he was one of them. Although Moses agrees with him and apologizes for making their lives more difficult, Aaron is reluctant to believe him and states that his lack of "wanting to see" doesn't change years of suffering that he and the Hebrews have endured. Miriam approaches and angrily tells Aaron that he "shames himself" and comforts their younger brother. Miriam explains toMoses that God will not abandon him, so he must never abandon the Hebrews. When Moses sees Rameses on the Nile, he rises to follow him. Moses then goes to the Nile and asks once again to let God's people go. Rameses refuses and in an instant, Moses turned the Nile to blood. Rameses thinks that it is a trick and still refuses to let the Hebrews go.

Moses Ramses FaceOff

Over the next few days, more plagues rained over Egypt until finally the Angel of Death took the lives of the first born children of Egypt (including Rameses' son) and Rameses finally gave Moses and the Hebrews his permission to go. Moses leads the Hebrews out of Egypt, but before they could cross the Red Sea, Rameses and his army appear and plan to kill the Hebrews for revenge. However, before they could get a chance, God summoned a tornado of fire to block the soldiers from reaching the Hebrews. Moses then made a clear pathway through the Red Sea and guided the Hebrews through. However, when they were almost on the other side, the fire tornado disappeared and Rameses and his soldiers charged toward the Hebrews. However, the walls of the sea began to fall and in an instant, all of the soldiers drowned and Rameses was left on shore in defeat. Moses says one last goodbye to his former adoptive brother and the film closes with him receiving the 10 Commandments (most likely the second tablet).

Musical[]

Moses appears in the stage adaptation of the film.

His role remains the same as the film, though in this version at the end, he and Ramses reconcile rather than part on bad terms as they did in the film.

Quotes[]

But I was their enemy. I-I was the Prince of Egypt! The son of the man who slaughtered... th-their children! You-You've chosen the wrong messenger! H-How can I even speak to these people?
~ Moses questioning God's choosing him to lead the Hebrews despite his past mistreatment of them.
Aaron: "So, Moses. How does it feel, when you get struck to the ground?!"
Moses: "I didn't mean to cause you more pain. I'm just trying to do as God told me."
Aaron: "God? When did God start caring about any of us? In fact, Moses, when did
you start caring about slaves? Was it when you found out that you were one of us?"
Tzipporah: "Don't listen to him!"
Moses: "No, he's- he's right. I did not see because I did not wish to see."
Aaron: "Oh, you didn't see because you didn't...
wish to see. Ah! Well, that makes everything fine then, doesn't it?"
~ Moses being accused by Aaron for his past mistreatment of slaves until he realized that he was one of them.

Trivia[]

  • In the Quran, Moses is known as "Musa" and he is the most mentioned character in the Quran, and a verse from the Quran was included in the movie's credits alongside a verse from the Book of Deuteronomy and a verse from the Acts of the Apostles. Despite this, The Prince of Egypt was banned in most Muslim-majority countries because Muslims consider visual depictions of Islamic figures to be a major taboo.

External Links[]

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