Prince Of Egypt Movie Facts, Easter Eggs and hidden details
13 of the most interesting Prince Of Egypt easter eggs you didn't know about. Handpicked and verified, these little-known hidden details can be obscure enough most people will miss. These behind the scene easter eggs and hidden messages will give you another view of Prince Of Egypt movie message.
Val Kilmer, Ralph Fiennes, Michelle Pfeiffer, Sandra Bullock
IMDB score
7.1
Costume details in Prince Of Egypt
Moses has a zebra skin rug
Prince Of Egypt movie hidden details
Two Egyptian guards are seen throwing their weapons down as the Jews Exodus. Later, they can be seen in the crowd, having joined them.
Moses and Rameses knock the Pharaohs nose off the monument while chariot racing. Later Rameses uses the nose as a meeting place.
. When the priests sing the "You're Playing With The Big Boys Now". They display a show of magic. In their song's lyrics, they name all of the Gods. Except Heka, The God Of Magic. Because, the magic was all fake and naming him would be disrespectful to him and the Gods.
The constellation that can be seen after the final plague against the first born is Orion. In Egyptian mythology, Orion is associated with Osiris, the god of the dead and the afterlife.
When Moses/God turns the Nile into blood, there is a small space of untainted water surrounding Moses
The hieroglyphs imply the future of Rameses' son
Its just my theory, but in Prince of Egypt (1998) the song "Playing with the big boys" is probably just a distraction so that someone could bring snakes for the priests, because they can't summon a Cobra like Moses did.
Moses remains untouched as the Nile turns to blood.
Passover Edition! In Dreamwork's Prince of Egypt (1998) a lot of Moses and Ramses' dialogues foreshadow later events in the film!
Defecting Egyptian guards can be seen to have joined the Hebrews after crossing the Red Sea
The song while leaving egypt is based on a song from the bible sung in the original hebrew.
Moses tells Ramses to let his people go multiple times during the Plagues of Egypt scene, yet he also remarks that Egypt was his home, implying "his people" applies both to the enslaved Hebrews and the suffering Egyptian subjects.