Video: Tutankhamun & the Golden Age of the Pharaohs
Summary:
(30 min.)King Tut was the boy king who reigned over Upper and
Lower Egypt some three thousand years ago. His rule wasn’t anything special and
he achieved basically nothing when it came to the political state of Egypt. One
of his predecessors, Akhenaton had this crazy idea of monotheism where everybody
prayed to him, because he thought he was a direct descendent of the sun god. Tut
was one of the first Pharaohs to do away with this idea. The people liked the
old religion and Tut was said to have started the transition back to this way of
life. But what makes him so special?
The main reason was that his tomb, out of all the ones found in the Valley of
the Kings, was the only one that hadn’t been robbed after it was sealed. By luck
and tenacity and with time and money running out Howard Carter triangulated his
findings and came across a find the world to this day still marvels at. I like
many have never had the chance to see the exhibit of Tut, but this DVD not only
gives you the chance it brings you close up with interesting historical
commentary. If you can stay awake it is well worth watching.
Omar Sharif, who brings passion to the history of his ancestors, narrates it.
Directed by Darryl Kinson, Tutankhamun gives us a direct link to the
exhibition with interviews from Stanford Egyptologist Kathlyn Cooney and Dr.
Zahi Hawass, who is the Secretary General of Antiquities in Cairo, Egypt, bring
insight to how the tomb was found and the discoveries within. In 1976 there were
about 50 or so items from the tomb were sent on tour of the U.S. Americans
everywhere had Tutmania, even to the point that Steve Martin had a hit song and
dance about the boy king on SNL (back in the days when it was funny).
This time, Cairo is giving the world a bigger glimpse at the treasures found by
Carter by showing 100 items, 50 from Tut’s tomb and 50 from the tombs that
surround his resting place. The sculptures and statues remind us of a harder yet
simpler time, making you wonder what life was like back in the day when there
were no i-Pods and the word “windows” only had one meaning. To see the work that
these craftsman accomplished, one must grasp the concept that these people did
all this work with the most basic of tools, and there wasn’t a Home Depot around
to help either.
Unfortunately, I wish the speakers had livened it up the material a bit. It took
me three attempts to watch this whole thing, and not because it’s so long, but
because it was so boring. Not much new information has been discovered about
Tut. The guy ruled from age nine to 18. Nine years can be brutal when you have
an idiot posing as an adult who thinks he’s in charge, but Tut was just a kid.
If he were in charge today, his rules would be less homework, more cartoons, and
chocolate cake for breakfast. Tut’s main claim to fame is the fact that his tomb
was the only one intact after all was said and done in an age where tomb robbers
were as fruitful then as televangelists now. (Review by Blogcritics Magazine)