Gods.of.egypt.2016 May 2026

Yet, there is a perverse coherence to this excess. Ancient Egyptian art is not naturalistic; it is hierarchical and symbolic. Pharaohs are depicted as giants. Gods have animal heads. The film’s aesthetic, however ineptly executed, attempts to translate that hierarchical scaling into CGI. The gods are bigger because they are more important . The world is a gilded, baroque stage set because the Egyptian afterlife (the Field of Reeds) is described as a perfect, golden reflection of life. The film’s failure is one of execution, not conception. It builds a world of pure surface, then asks us to care about what lies beneath. There is nothing beneath. But the surface is, at times, breathtakingly weird. Gods of Egypt is not a good movie. It is a fascinating artifact. It is what happens when a director with a genuine visual imagination (Proyas made Dark City and The Crow ) is given $140 million to make a myth, but no one remembers that myth requires mystery, silence, and the unseen. Instead, we get the seen, the over-seen, the constantly exploding.

This is strangely orthodox. In the Osiris myth, the god-king is murdered, dismembered, and requires his wife Isis and son Horus to avenge him. Egyptian gods are not the transcendent, omniscient God of Abraham. They are powerful but limited beings subject to fate, magic, and even death. Gods of Egypt amplifies this: Set, the usurper, is not a demon of pure evil but a resentful younger brother who feels overlooked. His motive—grief over Osiris’s favoritism—is almost Shakespearean, though delivered with the emotional nuance of a wrestling promo. The film’s divine drama is one of a dysfunctional royal family, not a cosmic battle of good and evil. The hero is Bek, a mortal thief, not Horus. This is the film’s most revealing structural choice. The gods cannot solve their own problems. Horus, stripped of his eyes, is impotent. Set, with all his power, is undone by a pickpocket and a lock of hair. The film posits that the cosmic order (Maat) requires the intervention of the small . Gods.of.egypt.2016

This is a radical democratic idea hiding in a sword-and-sandals epic: the gods need us. Without human cunning, love (Bek’s quest to resurrect his beloved Zaya), and sacrifice, the divine hierarchy collapses. The film’s climax is not a god killing a god, but a mortal helping a god land a decisive blow. It’s a fascinating inversion of the typical “chosen one” narrative. Bek is not special because of prophecy or bloodline; he is special because he dares to steal from a god. Hubris, in this world, is the engine of salvation. Let us not pretend: the film is visually grotesque in its excess. Every surface is polished gold. The costumes look like World of Warcraft armor designed by a luxury perfume commercial. The scale is ludicrous—doorways fifty meters high for beings who are only ten feet tall. The whitewashing (Gerard Butler as Set? Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as Horus?) is an embarrassing erasure. Yet, there is a perverse coherence to this excess