The Awakening (1980) Poster

(1980)

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6/10
Tension, thriller, suspense, and unsettling images set in Egypt and London.
ma-cortes4 November 2009
A veteran archaeologist (Charlton Heston) in Valley of Kings , Egypt , discovers the coffin of a nasty queen (Hatsetsupt ?) but open the tomb , the mummy's spirit is transferred to his baby daughter (one time grown-up is played by Stephanie Zimbalist) , born from his wife (Jill Townsend) at that moment . His spouse flees and Heston falls in love with his archaeology's partner (Susanna York).

This supernatural picture based on Bram Stoker's novel is packed with thrills , chills , suspense and wonderful outdoors from Egypt . The chief excitement lies in watching that new and innocent victim can be executed (Omen-alike) by the Egyptian mummy . The movie is full of grisly killings , terror , shocks and several eerie scenes . It displays a mysterious and sinister atmosphere , while the look is suitable spooky and frightening , the plot spreads to breaking point and the final turns out to be a bit frustrating . It appears as secondary Ian McDiarmid , today famous for his role as Chanciller Palpatine in Star Wars and Myrian Margolies who shows up in Harry Potter films . Colorful cinematography by the classic Jack Cardiff , the shooting unit filmed to capture the grandeur in Valley of Kings , Karnak , Luxor , which is considered as being one of the great wonders of the world and other splendorous locations in Egypt . Good and evocative musical score composed by Claude Bolling . The motion picture was professionally directed by Mike Newell . He's a nice director film-making for BBC television , dramas as ¨Enchanted April¨, ¨Mona Lisa smile¨, who achieved successes as ¨Donnie Brasco¨ and ¨Four wedding and a funeral¨; furthermore , ¨Adventures of young Indiana Jones¨ series and ¨Harry Potter and goblet fire¨, among others . The film will appeal to Charlton Heston fans and Egyptian theme aficionados.
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5/10
"I want her here".
lost-in-limbo12 March 2011
As grand productions go (which was a box-office flop), "The Awakening" is professionally catered for but remains a very tepid, old hat supernatural drama enterprise that consisted of excellently dedicated performances ( a serviceable Charlton Heston and an impressive Susannah York) and some stunningly projected Egyptian locations and decors. Outside of that, the story (adapted off Bram Stoker's "The Jewel of Seven Stars") while moodily haunting just felt like it was going through the motions and laboured along. The usual Egyptian tombs, curses unleashed, possessions of loved ones and an archaeologist's obsession to his work. No surprises and little interest, but I did like it's rather gloomily, downbeat conclusion that waited. It's suggestively slow-burn and crisp, dealing with a complex psychological edge filled with melancholy, detachment and righteous ideas. It's the beautiful imagery and majestic score that lingers, as everything is suggestively subtle with a slightly surreal, but more so grounded atmosphere. Stephanie Zimbalist is decent as Heston's possessed daughter and Jill Townsend as her mother.
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5/10
The Viewer Has the Sensation that Has Already Seen Before
claudio_carvalho26 August 2017
In Egypt, the archaeologist Matthew Corbeck (Charlton Heston) is obsessed to find the tomb of the ancient Queen Kara with his assistant Jane Turner (Susannah York) and his expedition. When he finds and opens Kara's tomb, his pregnant wife Anne Corbeck (Jill Townsend) simultaneously delivers their daughter Margaret. Eighteen years later, Margaret (Stephanie Zimbalist) has a strange behavior and Matthew believes the evil spirit of Kara is trying to possess his daughter. Now Matthew intends to perform an ancient ritual to save Margaret. Will he succeed?

"The Awakening" is not a totally bad film, having a great cast and good cinematography. Unfortunately the predictable story and the screenplay are ripoff of many films and the viewer has the sensation that has already seen before. My vote is five.

Title (Brazil): "Reencarnação" ("Reincarnation")
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4/10
The Sleepening.
hitchcockthelegend10 October 2013
The Awakening is directed by Mike Newell and collectively adapted to screenplay by Clive Exton, Chris Bryant and Allan Scott from the Bram Stoker novel The Jewel of Seven Stars. It stars Charlton Heston, Susannah York, Jill Townsend and Stephanie Zimbalist. Music is by Claude Bolling and cinematography by Jack Cardiff.

Heston plays archaeologist Matthew Corbeck, who after discovering the tomb of disgraced Egyptian Queen Kara discovers his daughter is possessed by Kara's spirit and to save mankind he may have to destroy her.

It's honourably serious, a willing attempt to make an intelligent end of the world type picture with flecks of troubling family dynamics. The production value is top draw, every effort has been made to make it look great, with lavish photography (nice to see a film of this type actually be filmed in Egypt), skillfully crafted set designs and an evocative score that drifts across the sands with distinction. Hell, even the casting of Heston at a time when his star had considerably faded, still gave the production some weight. If only it wasn't so immeasurably dull and distant!

The makers, obviously tugging on the coat tails of The Omen and Mummy movies previously, never develop the edgy themes bubbling away just below the narrative's surface. It's often feels like a big compromise was put forward by an executive, a request that they must ensure deaths are the draw card and to hell with the possibility of making a substantial brain tickler. Or it could just be that there were too many writers in the mix?! So what we essentially get is a laboriously paced movie going through the motions until the next death scene arrives, and then it's back to some slow brooding again.

The cast are solid, the ending suitably downbeat, and if you like Omen type deaths then there are a couple here worth your time, but you may need plenty of energizer drinks to keep you awake first. 4/10
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Not THAT Bad...Not THAT Good Either
BaronBl00d3 September 2001
The Awakening is a film about an archaeologist that finds the tomb of a nameless Egyptian queen named Kara. Charlton Heston plays Dr. Corbeck, a man consumed with finding evidence to support this legendary status of Kara. A man who puts work ahead of family, even during the birth of his own daughter. Heston finds the tomb in the very long introductory flashback of 18 years ago beginning the film. He finds it under somewhat strange circumstances. A man is killed attempting to stop his dig mysteriously. Whilst all this is going on, Heston's estranged wife is bearing his daughter after waking from a coma. Now, I am not really sure what the significance of all these events are, but I found the first part of this film in particular very engrossing. The next three fourths is what really lost me and some logical credibility as Heston meets his sultry 18 year-old daughter, they discuss how Queen Kara had killed her father and everyone that touched his hand because he killed her lover and made her partake of his own bed, and then takes her(Heston's daughter) to Egypt. While in Egypt, Stephanie Zimbalist goes under some strange transformation as if she is becoming Kara and we go from there. This film has some beautiful location shots in Egypt, and I found the information, whether real or imaginary, about the queen, mummification, canopic jars(jars used for organs), etc... quite fascinating. The acting is pretty good. I thought Heston did a fine job. Zimbalist is good as well. The biggest problem is the writing. After you watch the film, you really are not sure what happened. I still don't know. The film is also a bit slow in the first half, but there are(for those who really enjoy it) some very gruesome deaths too. I cannot wholeheartedly recommend the film, but if you enjoy the mysteries of Egypt or mummy movies in particular...I would give it a look see. What could it hurt?
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5/10
The Omen Meets The Mummy
bkoganbing10 December 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Starting in the Eighties although he certainly had some duds earlier in his career, the number of decent film projects seemed to dry up for Charlton Heston. My guess is that Heston decided to cash in on all the end time films that seemed to be cleaning up at the box office starting with The Omen. So the man most famous for starring in The Ten Commandments decided to do a combination of a Omen and Mummy tale.

Thus was born The Awakening. In it Charlton Heston plays an archaeologist who discovers the tomb of an unknown Egyptian princess. Heston knows something's afoot because he has previously uncovered records of a royal household member whose name like that of Prince Moses was stricken from all records because of some terrible occurrence.

Around the time Heston is unsealing the tomb in the valley of kings, his daughter is being born who grows up to be Stephanie Zimbalist. Flash forward to 18 years later and the daughter like Damien the devil's child seems to have a whole lot of people dropping dead around her.

Any film fan will recognize the plot threads in both The Omen and in the Boris Karloff classic, The Mummy. They're combined here in The Awakening with more or less mixed results. Susannah York is also along for the ride as Heston's girl Friday assistant who meets a rather grisly end.

It's not the worst film Heston ever did, but you sure long for the days of even the stilted Victorian dialog of Cecil B. DeMille.
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5/10
I've seen too many horror films to be surprised by this utterly predictable mummy movie.
AlsExGal10 July 2023
Charlton Heston plays archeologist Matthew Corbeck, who is obsessed with finding the tomb of Princess Kara. When Heston does find the tomb, he attacks the tomb with a sledgehammer; the blows coincide with the labor pains of his wife Anne (Jill Townsend). Her baby is stillborn, but starts breathing when Matthew takes the lid off the sarcophagus in Kara's tomb. The film follows a well-worn path from here.

Heston is as good a choice as anyone to play a man obsessed. Zimbalist plays dual roles as well as possible.

The unsolvable problem is the script the film's stuck with. It makes the fatal mistake of assuming audience members have never seen a horror movie before, and treats each cliche like a brand new idea. The characters' lines announce their impending deaths, one of which is stolen from 1976's "The Omen". You don't need to have seen more than one or two horror movies to guess what's going to happen. There is a subplot involving father and daughter being inordinately fond of each other (Otto disapproves of the word) that, according to the storyline, mirrors the relationship Kara and her father had back in ancient Egypt.

The unusually good score is by Claude Bolling. The cinematography is by Jack Cardiff. The script is blamed on four screenwriters. There are some horselaughs to be found, but they are outnumbered by the cliches the film enshrines. The music, photography, and tension built up over the last 20 minutes make this a tolerable time passer. Not as bad as I'd thought/hoped.
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6/10
Despite it's bad reputation & slow pace I actually quite liked it.
poolandrews14 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
The Awakening starts in Egypt 'Eighteen Years Ago' where an archaeologist named Matthew Corbeck (Charlton Heston) & his assistant Jane Turner (Susannah York) are on the verge of making the biggest archaeological find since the discovery of Tutankhamen. Corbeck is obsessed with locating the ancient 3,800 year old tomb of the evil Egyptian Queen Kara. Corbeck is so obsessed that he neglects his heavily pregnant wife Anne (Jill Townsend) who is in Egypt with him. Corbeck eventually locates Queen Kara's tomb & ventures inside, as he is about to open Kara's sarcophagus Anne gives birth to a stillborn baby girl. As Corbeck opens the lid to reveal the mummified Queen Kara his daughter starts to breathe almost magically coming back to life. It's now 'The Present' & Queen Kara's sarcophagus is housed in a museum in Cairo, Corbeck is now married to Jane & teaches in England while his ex wife Anne & his daughter Margaret (Stephanie Zimbalist) both live in New York. News reaches Corbeck that Queen Kara's remains may be deteriorating due to a fungus & that it needs to to treated. Margaret, who is just one week away from her eighteenth birthday, suddenly decides she has to see her Father & flies to England at the same time the mummified remains of Queen Kara arrive from Cairo. However death seems to follow Kara around, almost as if a supernatural force is guiding her to a predetermined destiny & anyone who stands in the way can expect to experience a fatal accident. Margaret starts to change, she appears to become possessed by the evil Queen Kara who wants to live again...

Directed by Mike Newell I actually quite liked The Awakening despite the stick it seems to get. The script by Chris Bryant, Clive Exton & Allan Scott based on the Bram Stoker novel 'The Jewel of Seven Stars' is intricate & you need to have patience to get the most out of it. If you want CGI mummy's & explosions every couple of minutes then The Awakening is definitely not the film for you, stick with Stephen Sommers The Mummy (1999) & it's sequel The Mummy Returns (2001) both of which I throughly like by the way. This is basically the same film as Hammer's Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (1971) which I thought was crap & I much prefer this take on Stoker's novel. The biggest problem I had with The Awakening, & the one most of it's detractor's seem to have, is that when the film returns to 'The Present' it is just too slow, it desperately either needed a couple more killings to liven things up a bit or to be edited down by five or ten minutes to quicken the pace. There is no mummy walking around in bandages so don't expect any of that sort of thing, the core storyline of The Awakening relies on a supernatural angle & possession rather than a guy in bandages. I think The Awakening is a very handsome film with real Egyptian location filming, in fact it's probably the only mummy film ever to be actually shot in Egypt! The cinematography by Oscar winner Jack Cardiff is as accomplished as you would expect. The sets especially Queen Kara's tomb, the Egyptian artifacts & general production design credited to Micheal Stringer are excellent throughout. I thought director Newell managed to create some good scenes & have an overall foreboding atmosphere for most of the film. There isn't much in the way of blood or gore but there is a really cool scene when a slither of glass falls from a broken window & impales someones throat, ouch! The acting is pretty good, well I thought so anyway. I liked The Awakening despite the fact everyone else seem to hate it, sure it's slow but I found it quite involving as well & was a nice change of pace without ever threatening to put me to sleep. I'm not sure I can recommend The Awakening as it would probably put most people into a coma but what the hell, I liked it & that's all that really matters to me.
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4/10
Messy Stoker adaptation with some good atmosphere lodged in a boring storyline
Leofwine_draca16 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is a dreary and dull rehash of Bram Stoker's novel The Jewel of the Seven Stars. It had already been made once, unsuccessfully, as Hammer's BLOOD FROM THE MUMMY'S TOMB, but somebody had the bright idea of making it again, in Britain, with Charlton Heston in the lead role. They didn't succeed very well, although the film is just about worthwhile for the authentic Egyptian scenes of sphinxes and desert tombs, which, for sheer visual value alone, blow away the staged sand-boxes that Hammer employed in their various Egyptian escapades.

Things kick off with a suitably atmospheric Egyptian prologue (lasting thirty minutes) which show Heston and his companion/lover York eventually discovering the tomb of Queen Kara they have been searching for. Heston uses a sledgehammer to smash his way into the tomb, while at the same time his wife gives birth to their daughter before promptly leaving for America - without Heston. I do admit that the sound effects guys manage to work up a few chills with the eerie moans and echoes that rise out of Kara's tomb because of the wind, but Newell's direction is static and saps the life out of any potentially exciting events.

Cut to eighteen years later, and Heston's grown-up daughter (Zimbalist) arrives in London to live with her father. He dashes her off to Egypt in a scene which serves no purpose to further the plot - instead, it just seems to be an excuse to show some nice Egyptian locations (again) and the dusty interiors of a tomb. The plot really begins to fall apart at the end, with Heston becoming obsessed and his daughter possessed; some incestuous love between the two is hinted at but never explored - only through a brief kiss. The final occurs in the British Museum (not a bad place for a finale, I do admit) and sees Heston trying to resurrect the Queen - not realising he is doing so, except through his daughter. Horrified, before he can act he is buried under some unexplained falling masonry. Halfway through this scene we see a young male associate of Heston's breaking into his house to find some ancient artifacts missing - we don't see this guy again, which makes the scene totally arbitrary and pointless, and perhaps suggests that footage has been left on the cutting room floor. The ending sees Zimbalist reincarnated as the Queen (well, either that or she's suddenly decided to try some new eye make-up and a new hairstyle), set loose in London.

The acting is pretty wooden, even from the experienced players. Heston is believable as the stuffy Professor, but he can't get over the fact that his character is a cliché and one-dimensional. Zimbalist just doesn't have the presence to be scary as his daughter, while York tries to make the best of her nothing role. Eagle-eyed viewers will spot a young Ian McDiarmid popping up as a psychiatrist before he shot to a kind of fame in RETURN OF THE JEDI (as the Emperor, no less) as well as Miriam Margoyles as a nurse.

This is a dull, action-less film, it has to be said, complete with long scenes of dialogue and standing around. To try and counter-act this, the producers obviously demanded that a string of gory deaths be thrown in periodically, in the style of THE OMEN. These deaths are staged in a silly over-the-top way but they do serve to make things a bit more watchable. One man is hanged via a runaway cable; another is crushed by a truck; another stabbed by a trap and finally, in the film's most painful death, an unfortunate character falls on to his own syringe which embeds in his heart. The film's best death belongs to York, who falls to her death through glass. Except that this doesn't kill her; a swinging piece of glass falls down into her throat and finishes the job. Before this happens, we are subjected to a few moments of intense suspense, sadly the only suspense in the entire film's running time. THE AWAKENING was a flop and is a bad film, yes, but there are some things worth watching for so it's not the worst movie ever - just a below average one.
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6/10
Why can't archaeologists just leave tombs alone?
lee_eisenberg16 February 2007
Moses returns to Egypt, but not to free his people. In this case, Charlton Heston plays an egyptologist who opens the tomb of an evil queen. Sure enough, the spirit awakens with it, and possesses Heston's newborn daughter. And anyone who gets in her way is asking for it.

Obviously, a movie like this can't reach the quality of "The Shining", but it is good in a pinch. I really liked the end scene; as NRA president, couldn't he have just pulled out a rifle and dealt with it that way? But anyway, "The Awakening" will almost certainly keep you awake. As far as I'm concerned, these archaeologists need to just leave tombs alone; they deserve to experience bad things for opening them.

Also starring Susannah York, Jill Townsend, Stephanie Zimbalist, Ian McDiarmid (of the "Star Wars" movies) and Miriam Margoyles.
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5/10
All this time we thought it was the big sleep...
rmax30482326 May 2002
This movie isn't as terrible as some reviewers have made it out to be. Let's say, overall, about average for its type. The photography is more than adequate, the locations unmistakably including Egypt. The score does its job well. And the acting is on par with Charlton Heston's usual. He can do better when he wants to, as in "Khartoum." Stephanie Zimbalist is fresh, attractive, and seductive -- both before and after she is possessed by the spirit of Kara. She's pretty sexy too, decked out in tight bell-bottomed slacks and wearing her long auburn hair held back by a barette -- is that the word? One of her more exciting moments comes when she steps down in the tomb and kisses her father warmly on the lips. She seems to have not much more than a few expressions to work with, which is okay; Gary Cooper only had one and a half. She relies mainly on an intense stare and half smile, which can signal either happiness or evil intent. The editing is confusing and the ending leaves the story open for a sequel which will probably never come. The story itself is dated, although spiced up with some Omen-like executions.

Heston would never get away with removing those artifacts from Egypt today. Not unless there was a huge under-the-table payoff made. No more Elgin-marble controversies. The archaeological techniques are dated as well. The archaeologists we seem to think of as heroes would be considered criminally sloppy by today's standards. If you excavate a site now, you don't just dig into it to see what you can find. You dig a trench into the site, from the outside inward, so you leave most of the site intact for future research. We don't know what analytic techniques will be available a hundred years from now, anymore than Carnaveron and the rest could foresee Carbon dating. Brouilloin, the information theorist, called this "the principle of fundamental surprise." If we knew now what we will have discovered a hundred years from now, we would already have discovered it. What Schliemann did at Troy was simply dig it up until all the information was gone, the archaeological equivalent of strip mining. King Tut's tomb was handled just as badly. When they first cracked the wall of the as-yet unsullied part of the tomb, a breath of air whooshed out from the opening. That air was three thousand years old. It was the same air breathed by the Egyptians who built the tomb. We will never know its chemical composition or what kind of particulate matter might still have been floating around. And the soil of the tomb, which surely contained biological materials like pollen and the residue of three-thousand-year-old microorganisms, was treated like -- well, like ordinary dirt.

The movie has few zingers. It moves slowly and deliberately, a pace that many modern moviegoers are no longer used to, after so much exposure to MTV techniques. And the director -- all directors -- need to have it pounded into their skulls that when a character looks into a mirror on screen, the audience is not supposed to see her staring obliquely into the camera lens. Not only does the use of this stupid trick contribute absolutely nothing, but it is distracting and jarring, and an insult to at least some of the viewers.
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10/10
An Egyptologist's daughter's life becomes entwined with in her father's obsession to revive the mummy of an evil queen.
thomasbecker10826 June 2007
If you are any kind of Egypt enthusiast, you will love this! The university lecture, the tomb scenes, the obsession with research, the special organ jars (spelling of which "c a n o p i c" is denied by IMDb!) -- it is all well done and fun. Having taught ancient Egyptian history for many years, I find that this movie is filled with great realia and references to the rich mythology of Egypt. I routinely showed it to my 6th grade ancient history class! The plot moves well and there is a great sense of rising action and suspense. The acting is solid, and the music and the filming are well done. I really have no idea why this film has been rated so low by the viewers. Please see yourself and boost the rating on this fine piece of suspenseful work!
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6/10
A rather interesting movie...
paul_haakonsen6 July 2021
I stumbled upon the 1980 movie "The Awakening" here in 2021. Oddly enough, then I don't think I've actually ever seen the movie before. So of course I found the time to sit down to watch it.

And I must say that writers Allan Scott, Chris Bryant and Clive Exton definitely were on to something there, and "The Awakening" is actually one of the more suspenseful and interesting of mummy curses movie that I have seen. Sure, there weren't actually walking mummies in the movie, but the atmosphere that permeated the movie was just brilliant, and it really worked well in favor of the movie.

"The Awakening" does have a good ensemble of actors and actresses on the cast list, with the likes of Charlton Heston and Susannah York. And it was a treat to see a young Ian McDiarmid in the movie as well.

While "The Awakening" is labeled as a horror movie, you shouldn't sit down to watch it with the hopes of watching an ordinary horror movie, because then you'll be sorely disappointed. No, "The Awakening" was more of a supernatural thriller than it was a horror movie, I think.

I thoroughly enjoyed this 1980 movie from director Mike Newell, and it turned out to be far more entertaining than I had initially anticipated for a mummy movie from 1980.

If you haven't already seen "The Awakening", and if you enjoy movies that have a mummy and Egyptian theme, then "The Awakening" is definitely well worth the time.

My rating of "The Awakening" lands on a six out of ten stars.
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2/10
Laughably bad
jjnxn-110 October 2013
The words claptrap, junk and hokum all spring to mind when this silly possession movie is mentioned. Produced during that unfortunate period after The Exorcist hit big and every other movie was some type of scare flick this one doesn't even have a very plausible script to start with. Charlton Heston, more wooden than ever, seems as unconvinced as the audience in the twists and turns of the plot. Poor Susannah York, the most talented of the actors trapped herein, spends the beginning of this turkey in one of the most unbecoming wigs ever seen. Stephanie Zimbalist pops up as Heston's daughter in an early role but her behavior is just as nonsensical as everybody else. Watch this only if you want to make fun of something.
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A sad waste of talent.. Heston can do better.
barnabyrudge25 December 2002
It's sad to find a legendary actor like Charlton Heston working on a tenth rate horror film like this. The story takes its inspiration from a largely forgotten Bram Stoker novel and casts Heston as an obsessive archaeologist searching for the tomb of an evil Egyptian queen. He finds it, but at the very same moment his wife is busy giving birth to a baby daughter. You don't have to be a detective to figure out that the spirit of the long-dead evil queen possesses his daughter. Nor do you have to be particularly bright to guess that as she grows into a teenager, she begins to demonstrate worryingly dangerous behaviour. By the end, daddy Heston (just like Gregory Peck in The Omen) is convinced that his little girl is demonic and attempts to destroy her.

Jack Cardiff tremendous photography provides the film with its sole merit, bringing to life the glorious Egyptian vistas in all their sun drenched beauty. Heston and York act decently, but the material is hardly challenging. The main problem with the film is the dullness of the script and the absence of pace and urgency in the narrative. It's predictable too, which is a shame. Worst of all, it commits the sin that so many horror films commit: it completely fails to push the viewer out of their comfort zone. No questions are posed, no disturbing ideas are explored and no menacing message is used to underpin the film. It's just a bland, boring travelogue that dares to call itself a bloodcurdler.
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5/10
Archaeologists never know when to leave well enough alone.
Hey_Sweden24 August 2015
Matthew Corbeck (Charlton Heston) is a veteran Egyptologist who discovers the tomb of Queen Kara. As fate would have it, her spirit leaves the tomb at the moment he enters it, and possesses his newborn daughter. 18 years later, the headstrong daughter (Stephanie Zimbalist) determines to reunite with her father in Egypt. She becomes concerned over her blackouts, and fears the worst. And the somber Matthew believes that in order to stop the evil queen, he will have to kill his girl in a ritual sacrifice.

It does sound like a good plot, doesn't it? It's based on the novel "The Jewel of the Seven Stars" by Bram Stoker of "Dracula" fame, which was previously filmed by Hammer as "Blood from the Mummy's Tomb". The Hammer version is more entertaining than this plodding effort, however. Director Mike Newell treats the material as straight drama for the most part, with thrilling and creepy moments few and far between. In his hands, the story just isn't as interesting or compelling as one might like it to be. Still, some genre fans may appreciate it for taking a more adult, restrained approach than a traditional one. Major assets include an excellent score by Claude Bolling and cinematography by the great Jack Cardiff.

Heston does a good job, as could be expected. He's actually rather low key in the leading role. Susannah York, as his associate Jane, and Jill Townsend, as his wife Anne, are fine. Zimbalist, unfortunately, just doesn't come off that well. There are some strong actors in the cast, though: Nadim Sawalha, Ian McDiarmid, Miriam Margolyes.

On location shooting in Egypt, and the resulting atmosphere of the settings, help to make this passable if never really exciting. It only picks up a little during its last third.

Five out of 10.
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5/10
Misunderstood Movie
sreyno-229 November 2006
This movie was a sleeper from 1980. With such an accomplished cast, you would have thought it would be a real money maker. However, due to a poor and boring script, it failed to make notice and is now unremembered. Being a fan of mummy pictures. I rather enjoyed it. If just for the location shooting in Egypt, and the beautiful Tutankhamen artifacts that are shown throughout the picture. I also thought Stephanie Zimbalist did a particularly good job of acting in this as well as the others in spite of the script difficulties,which is proof of their various talents. In summation. I would see this again. It is worthy of at least one showing to anyone interested in this kind of mummy clap-trap.
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3/10
Boring, unsuccessful.
gridoon22 September 2001
This could have been a chilling horror movie, and a quite profound one as well, examining the eternal "science vs. magic" subject, but it doesn't cut it. You keep expecting it to become tense, but that only happens in the final 5 minutes. Until then, it moves like molasses, and the two or three scenes that work are those that try to imitate similar sequences from the "Omen". Unfortunately, this movie is not nearly in the same league. (*1/2)
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7/10
Surprise appearance from Senator Palpatine!
Great cast! Great acting! Great curse and deaths! Great location with real scenery filmed partially in Egypt! Low ratings aren't fair. It's a typical 1980 movie based on storyline and not a crap load of CGI garbage we get now. Oh and did I meant you get a scene from Senator Palpatine from Star Wars? Haha.
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1/10
Boring, boring, BORING!!!!!!
preppy-34 October 2001
Stupid plot (the ghost of a mummy possessing a newborn kid--please!), lousy acting (except for York) and snails pacing sink this movie. I saw it at a theatre in 1980 (I was one of the very few dummies who paid full price to see this) and I couldn't believe it. It was just the worst--I considered walking out but just had trouble staying awake. Did Heston and York actually read the script before committing to this? The only thing that was halfway interesting are a couple of very gory murders that (I assume) were put in the film to keep people awake. There's no need for them to be so bloody--but I'm not complaining! They were the only interesting things in this crap. One of the worst horror films EVER! If you don't believe me, name all the people you know who actually have seen (or even heard) of this film.
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7/10
enjoyable, but somewhat forgettable
JorritM7 January 2022
While it certainly has some flaws, I very much enjoyed watching The Awakening. Nice shots of museum pieces, Egyptian deserts, etc always make me happy, and the acting was not bad either. It was certainly less silly than The Mummy movies, so a 7/10 for The Awakening would be well deserved. Is it a great piece of groundbreaking cinema? No. But it's certainly much better than a lot of more highly rated movies. If you like ancient Egypt, horror, and/or a light Lovecraftian atmosphere, I'm sure you'll enjoy this. If not, you should probably skip this one (but then why are you reading the IMDb reviews of a mummy horror? What did you expect?).
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1/10
So bad it's painful
twassel27 February 2001
Other than Susanna York, badly acted, horribly plotted, even horribly edited. (There's one scene that just sort of appears out of nowhere, and ends just as quickly, with no connection to the rest of the film). No suspense, no laughs, just plain bad.
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8/10
Really Good Variant on Mummy Story
tawhicks11 July 2020
This was very well done. Creepy and atmospheric. Charlton Heston plays an Egyptologist obsessed with an ancient Egyptian queen who was officially erased from their history because of her evil and who promised to live again. Stephanie Zimbalist gives a good performance as the scholar's daughter who was born on the day when the tomb of the queen was opened. I will say no more. This is a twist on the normal mummy story and provides an unsettling ending. I recommend this highly.
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7/10
The importance of developing a good work-family balance
myriamlenys20 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
An archaeologist is far more interested in his work than in his marriage. The problem is compounded by the fact that he feels attracted to his pretty assistant, who shares his passion for Egyptology. Consequently his wife has to give birth without his support. Meanwhile Daddy is out discovering the intact tomb of a female ruler. In later years, his sense of priorities will come back to haunt him...

"The awakening" is a very loose adaptation of a Gothic novel by Bram Stoker. This is usually the point where I look nastily over my glasses and say things like "If you don't like somebody's work why bother with it ?" or "If you think you're a better author than X, go ahead and write a book of your own". However, Stoker's novel had serious structural problems. Moreover, it hasn't aged all that well. Consequently one can forgive the various makers of the movie for taking an adventurous approach to the source material.

To the students who were given "The jewel of seven stars" as an assignment and who hoped to take a shortcut by watching "The awakening" : beware, you might be headed for a "nil points" of Eurosong Contest proportions...

The movie, watched as a creative work with its own qualities, is a rather enjoyable horror movie about an ancient Egyptian queen who refuses to remain dead and who tries to return as a living woman in this our modern era. (One wonders if this would be such a great idea, what with climate change, the atom bomb and Tuna Melt Croissants.) It's not the most frightening thing ever, but it does do its best to spin an entertainingly creepy yarn with a number of fine scare moments. Much of the movie was filmed in Egypt itself and one gets a strong sense of the fascinating power and allure of ancient Egyptian civilization. Many of the props too are mesmerizing.

In a way "The awakening" can also be read as a grim satirical warning about the dangers of preferring one's career over one's family. In the movie, the archaeologist protagonist leaves his wife during a critical moment, which leads to an enduring rift. Eighteen years later he finds himself facing a hostile ex-wife and an estranged daughter who's morphing into an unlovely riddle. And instead of dying of old age in his bed, comforted by sobbing children and grandchildren, he ends up an utter failure, betrayed even by his own great knowledge.

Comes with a beautiful, romantic musical score.
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1/10
Exorcist meets Camp Crystal Lake- on the Nile!
paskuniag1 May 2005
This is another one of those movies that tries to be scary, mysterious, and filled with tension, but doesn't invoke anything but laughter, the unintentional kind.

As in "The Exorcist", an evil something-or-other (Actually, an Egyptian queen, whose spirit was freed by archaeologist Chuck and his minions) is wandering about, looking to create malice. And like the counselors at Camp Crystal Lake, the characters in "The Awakening" are getting bumped off one by one in very creative ways. Actually, this movie could have used Jason, or at least his hockey mask, which the actors could have worn to hide their faces, thus shielding them from ridicule by those who howl at this excellent example of truly bad cinema.

What were Charlton Heston and Susannah York thinking when they signed on to do this epic? Mucho dollars, probably. That has to be the reason- for sure, this ain't art.

Also in the cast is a young Stephanie Zimbalist, who plays Chuck's daughter. She becomes possessed by the queen's spirit and turns into an evil, sexy royal. The third act alone, where she really starts raising Cain, is worth a rental (only if you have a freebie- don't plunk down real money for this one). If you liked Stephanie in "Remington Steele", then see what propelled her to do TV- the sooner people could forget her in this horrid film, the better for her career.
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