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Patterns of Evidence: Exodus

  • 2014
  • Unrated
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Patterns of Evidence: Exodus (2014)
Faith & Spirituality DocumentaryDocumentaryHistory

An investigation into the validity of the Exodus.An investigation into the validity of the Exodus.An investigation into the validity of the Exodus.

  • Director
    • Timothy P. Mahoney
  • Writers
    • Steven Law
    • Timothy P. Mahoney
  • Stars
    • Kevin Sorbo
    • Benjamin Netanyahu
    • David Rohl
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Timothy P. Mahoney
    • Writers
      • Steven Law
      • Timothy P. Mahoney
    • Stars
      • Kevin Sorbo
      • Benjamin Netanyahu
      • David Rohl
    • 41User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins total

    Photos8

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    Top cast27

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    Kevin Sorbo
    Kevin Sorbo
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Benjamin Netanyahu
    Benjamin Netanyahu
    • Self - Prime Minister of Israel
    David Rohl
    • Self - Egyptologist, Author 'Exodus-Myth or History?'
    Shimon Peres
    Shimon Peres
    • Self - President of Israel
    Israel Finkelstein
    • Self - Archaeologist, Tel Aviv University
    Norma Franklin
    • Self - Archaeologist, University of Haifa
    David Wolpe
    David Wolpe
    • Self - Author 'Why Faith Matters'
    • (as Rabbi David Wolpe)
    Michael Medved
    Michael Medved
    • Self - Radio Talk Show Host, Author
    Timothy P. Mahoney
    • Self - Filmmaker
    James Hoffmeier
    James Hoffmeier
    • Self - Egyptologist, Author 'Israel in Egypt'
    • (as James K Hoffmeier)
    Mansour Boraik
    • Self - Director of General Antiquities, Luxor
    Manfred Bietak
    • Self - Egyptologist, University of Vienna
    Kent Weeks
    • Self - Egyptologist, Theban Mapping Project
    Manis Friedman
    • Self - Biblical Scholar, Author
    • (as Rabbi Manis Friedman)
    Charles Aling
    • Self - Egyptologist, University of Northwestern, St. Paul
    Bryant Wood
    • Self - Archaeologist, Association for Biblical Research
    John Bimson
    • Self - Tutor in Old Testament, Trinity College, Bristol
    David Hartman
    • Self - Shalom Hartman Institute, Author
    • (as Rabbi David Hartman)
    • Director
      • Timothy P. Mahoney
    • Writers
      • Steven Law
      • Timothy P. Mahoney
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews41

    7.01.2K
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    Featured reviews

    9scott-dix

    Great Overview of the Evidence for the Exodus and Alternative Theories

    This film provides an engaging introduction and overview of the evidence for the entry of Joseph into Egypt, the 14 years of plenty and famine, the fruitful multiplication of Jacob's descendants (Israel), their subsequent slavery, the 10 plagues, including detailed evidence of the 10th plague, the exodus from Egypt into Canaan and Israel's conquest of Canaan. It demonstrates the difficulty with dating ancient events, but also the patterns of evidence that line up with the Biblical record and also lines up against the Egyptian historical sequence, but is generally panned today since it does not match up with the modern dating of Egyptian history. This evidence calls for an objective review.
    8Seraphion

    Compelling and faith empowering

    I am Christian to begin with, and I'm proud to say that my faith is strong in The Lord. But I'm not a scientist, though I am curious and often times seek the truth. It's very much faith empowering how this film elaborates on the story of Exodus, at the same time comparing it with coherent scientific evidence. Yet this movie also still nicely leaves room for faith. As faith is the basis of things we can't see, one needs faith to understand the reasoning this movie presented, while the evidence itself still gets debated by scientists. I for one at prior to this movie wasn't aware of the gap of date settings between scientists, or even the whole counter-idea of the Exodus itself, as being a myth. At a skeptic's perspective this may prove that ignorance is bliss. But I see it as the fact that faith in God can't be distinguished by mere scientists' wisdom, which base their findings on mere rags and tatters.
    kwacka2

    Scientific?

    I took a look at this, but sad to say, this is anything but scientific.

    The scientific method - formulate a hypothesis and attempt to disprove it. Falsifiabilty is a cornerstone of the scientific method, and always beware of anybody who claims to have 'proved' something.

    The non-scientific method (used here) formulate a hypothesis and attempt to prove it.

    If you tried hard enough you could 'prove' that werewolves are real, or that Barak Obama is a Muslim.

    The Biblical account MAY be true, but this contributes nothing to the story of Exodus.
    7GuitarRob22

    It was pretty good....until the panel

    Tim Mahoney had a pretty good argument about revising the time line of Exodus, and had some archaeological pieces I hadn't seen yet. The only thing that absolutely ruined the movie was the HORRIBLE Fox News panel at the end. My God man, what were you thinking?! 5 smug TV personalities joking about how you had to be an idiot to not 100% buy into it- I almost walked out. Another thing Mahoney LOVES to do is stare thoughtfully into the camera. Stroke the chin...squint the eyes...look away... I believe a good 20 minutes of this extraordinarily long film was devoted to such. Good thing there was a break! All that soul searching made me in much need of snacks. Anyway, if you skip the very last segment it's a pretty good film.
    3classicalsteve

    An Alternative View of Egyptian and Israelite History Which Makes Too Many Leaps

    As an amateur historian, I know when there is sufficient grounds to make an historical claim from evidence and when the claim is "reaching", drawing conclusions to fit preconceived notions. In other words, when "historians" try to prove something they already believe in advance, we should gently question whether their conclusions may be colored by bias. There's a difference between an historian who attempts to find out how Ancient Egyptians lived versus trying to prove the biblical accounts regarding the Hebrews and the Egyptians are true. If they find evidence which might "fit" into their overall perspective, and they make claims which rely mostly upon interpretation of the evidence rather than what the evidence itself suggests, this is regarded as borderline or even bad scholarship, also called "confirmation bias".

    The documentary "Patterns of Evidence" seeks to prove whether the Exodus of the Bible is a true event, since the Bible must be taken literally, or so the central figure/narrator claims. (The reading of biblical texts as factual accounts is a gross misunderstanding of the texts.) At the beginning of the documentary, devout Christian filmmaker Tim Mahoney decides to find out if there is evidence to prove the historicity of the Exodus. In the first few minutes, Mahoney travels to the Eastern Mediterranean and meets Manfred Beitak, an Austrian Egyptologist and archaeologist who is excavating an ancient Semite town, Avaris. Mahoney, upon examining the excavation hypothesizes this could be the Israelite settlement given the Pharaoh's blessing in passages relating the life of the Patriarch Joseph of the "Coat of Many Colors". Mahoney makes this suggestion to Beitak, and the archaeologist responds that to connect this village with the biblical account is a "very weak affair". In other words, Beitak cannot conclude the town is the same one as depicted in the Bible. Mahoney becomes disappointed, and the whole experience puts into question his faith, because, as he sees it, the Bible must be true history otherwise his own faith might be based on a "lie".

    He returns to the United States and then decides to take up the quest again at a more involved level. He begins by finding historians who have alternative theories which match his own beliefs. This is the first major problem with the documentary. Certainly, anyone can find "historians" and/or "scholars" who have views which contradict mainstream scholarship. While certainly there is nothing wrong with interviewing people who disagree with the larger academic and scholarly community and who voice their disagreements with a different rationale, I felt the documentary was completely unbalanced after Beitak's skepticism. Mahoney only seems to be interested with those scholars on the outside of modern scholarship who wish to make the case that current Egyptian scholarship is "flawed" and that the Bible and Egyptian chronology do in fact match but requires a complete rethinking Egyptian history, known as the "New Chronology".

    Shortly thereafter, Mahoney interviews David Rohl, a highly controversial figure in Ancient Egyptian studies. Rohl has proposed a so-called "New Chronology", an alternative view of the chronological events and dates of Ancient Egypt. He claims the town of Avaris is called "The Land of Ramses" in the Bible, and the confusion comes because a biblical editor at some time used the term "Land of Ramses" to depict Avaris. He believes mainstream scholarship is completely incorrect in terms of Egyptian Chronology. While, I have no problem with hearing Rohl's rationale (which would at face value put into question the idea of the Bible as unerring history), there is no counter figure who explains the mainstream view. The only words we get from Beitak at the beginning is that the hypothesis is a "weak affair", but we don't hear the rest of the interview as to why he questions Rohl and others who work on the "outside".

    At Avaris, there has been found the remains of a large statue inside a small pyramid structure of a prominent person, probably a great leader. Now, I do agree, the evidence does suggest the prominent person is a Semite and not an Egyptian because of the hairstyle. However, the documentary wants to prove that this may be in fact Joseph of "The Coat of Many Colours" fame from the Bible. They point to some faded paint on the remains of the statue's shoulder which they claim are remains of a depiction of a colored coat! This is really reaching. Some flecks of paint are not enough to jump to the conclusion this is the Coat of Many Colours and therefore Joseph! It could simply be the remains of the depiction of royal robes, since red as a royal color goes back millennium. Also, the documentary says that 12 graves were found near the statue, which could be the 12 tribes of Israel. Yes, it could be, but again, to conclude the existence of twelve graves means that these represent the Twelve Tribes of Israel as fact is a huge leap. If there were Hebrew inscriptions attesting to such, then that would be compelling evidence. As it stands, what we have are the remains of a statue and the remains of twelve graves, which would not be enough to compel academia to concur with Mahoney's hypotheses.

    The statue remains at Avaris and the conclusions drawn are just a few of the problems with how this documentary is making its claims. It takes some evidence, then looks at the Bible, sees if they match, and then draws conclusions. There was no evidence outside of interpretation Avaris was an Israelite town once having been led by the Biblical Joseph. What they needed were other scholars to explain why some of the conclusions drawn were not accepted by mainstream historians. I am sure people who believe the world is flat could also find a few convincing "scholars" who make very convincing arguments about their views. Much of what is presented as "fact" is really simply "opinion" disguised as fact.

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    Related interests

    Morgan Freeman in The Story of God with Morgan Freeman (2016)
    Faith & Spirituality Documentary
    Dziga Vertov in Man with a Movie Camera (1929)
    Documentary
    Liam Neeson in Schindler's List (1993)
    History

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This is narrated by Kevin Sorbo.
    • Soundtracks
      Inner Voices
      From Inner Voices by R. Carlos Nakai

      Courtesy of Canyon Records

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Patterns of Evidence: Exodus?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 19, 2015 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
      • Netherlands
      • Lebanon
      • Israel
      • Egypt
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Esodo: alla ricerca delle prove
    • Production company
      • Thinking Man Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $925,576
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $764,309
      • Jan 19, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $925,576
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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