Jesus Christ Superstar

Jesus Christ Superstar

2000
Drama
Musical
1h 47m
Great Performances - Season: 29, Episode: 11 - All Episodes
The Passion of Jesus Christ as seen through the eyes of Judas. This popular rock musical is based on the 1996 London/2000 Broadway revivals of the show, directed by Gale Edwards. Re-orchestrated and set to modern times, it is not the Superstar of the 70's but rather one for the 21st Century. (imdb)
Your probable score
?

Jesus Christ Superstar

2000
Drama
Musical
1h 47m
Your probable score
Avg Percentile 39.7% from 46 total ratings

Ratings & Reviews

(46)
Compact view
Compact view
Rated 25 Apr 2011
90
83rd
Wonderful recording of the show, videotaped rather than filmed, but giving a greater sense of access to the performers which heightens the "live show" atmosphere. Pradon is a wonderful Judas; Carter as Jesus tends to be a one-note actor, but delivers the goods in his solos. Owens is also a wonderful Caiaphas. The facist reimagining is also very interesting. It's made for TV (and it shows) but ultimately ends up a very satisfying and exciting version of the show
Rated 25 Jul 2012
70
20th
Worst movie version of JCS... The 1973 version is so much better.
Rated 13 Jun 2009
2
39th
Pradon & Mayall are fantastic as Judas & Herod. The Pharisees & Pilate are also convincing. Unfortunately, everyone else is pretty uninspired (Jesus, Mary, Simon and the other apostles) and the sets look ridiculously cheap, even for a "televised play". The music gets a nice update though.
Rated 09 Oct 2012
48
16th
This is basically a typical, mediocre film adaptation of a musical. Jesus is barely good enough, Judas is far from good enough, Mary is mildly annoying, and Pilate is less subtle than a burning freight train caught in a hurricane during a thunderstorm (even more so than everything else in this movie). Still, some of the songs are handled quite well, so it has its perks.
Rated 21 Feb 2015
30
8th
Really bad. Judas is a pretty good actor, but whenever he starts singing you want to skip the scene. Jesus clearly struggles with the high notes that Ted Neeley kicked so much ass on in the 1973 version. The rest of the cast ranges from painful (Pilate) to serviceable (Mary), with the sole standout being Frederick Owens, whose booming bass is perfect for Caiaphas. Please, for the love of Christ, skip this one and just watch the 1973 version.
Rated 22 May 2011
48
9th
Not a great interpretation of the great musical. The casting is all wrong, particularly when it comes to Judas and Jesus (the two most important roles). It's complete lack of subtlety doesn't help either.

Collections

Loading ...

Similar Titles

Loading ...

Statistics

Loading ...

Trailer

Loading ...