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Tut
Mini-series
TV-14
37%
88%
Add Show to Watchlist
A largely fictional mini-series based on a legendary teenage Pharaoh of Ancient Egypt.
More
Where to Watch Tut • Mini-series
Amazon Video
Free
YouTube
Subscription
Cast of Mini-series
Ben Kingsley
Ay
Avan Jogia
King Tutankhamun
Nonso Anozie
General Horemheb
Sibylla Deen
Ankhe
Alexander Siddig
Amun
Kylie Bunbury
Suhad
Peter Gadiot
Ka
Iddo Goldberg
Lagus
Alistair Toovey
Nahkt
Silas Carson
Akhenaten
Kaizer Akhtar
Young Tut
Steve Toussaint
King Tushratta
Geoffrey Burton
Chief Physician Dagi
Leon Lopez
Sete
Malcolm Stone
Set Decoration
Michael Z. Hanan
Production Design
David Ensley
Art Direction
Christopher LaVasseur
Director Of Photography
Carlo Poggioli
Costume Design
Colleen Quinton
Makeup Department Head
Tut • Mini-series Ratings & Reviews
Shadow and Act
Aramide Tinubu
Tut has all of the makings for a powerful re-entry into scripted programming for Spike TV, unfortunately the series falls short, giving it more of a soap opera feel, than the epic saga that I'd hoped for.
Common Sense Media
Kari Croop
Tut at least signifies an attempt to attract a broader audience beyond fans of, say, mixed martial-arts fighting and SpongeBob SquarePants reruns with a respectable TV epic that gets a lot of things right about King Tut's reign.
San Francisco Chronicle
David Wiegand
Tut is primarily meant as an old-fashioned blood, sand and sex epic with cool battle scenes, grunt-filled lovemaking, serviceable dialogue, CGI and papier-mache sets, and minimal heavy lifting on the part of Oscar-winner Kingsley.
Los Angeles Times
Mary McNamara
There is fun to be had from Tut, which gallops from sex scene to battle scene to soulful close-up with remarkable rapidity.
Screen Rant
Kevin Yeoman
Tut's cast is comprised of young actors with matinee-idol good looks that makes for a consistently attractive viewing experience, nonetheless hampered by an undeniable superficial quality.
The Hollywood Reporter
Keith Uhlich
The series is so devoid of any real riches, it should be hosted by Geraldo.
Philadelphia Daily News
Ellen Gray
Three nights' worth of Tut became a slog, some of it through copious amounts of spurting blood.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Tirdad Derakhshani
Spike unveils its first major scripted production, Tut, a largely enjoyable, if uneven three-night epic.
Wall Street Journal
Nancy DeWolf Smith
The dialogue ranges from the prosaic: "I seem to have lost my way. Can you spare me some meat?"-to the accidentally amusing.
USA Today
Robert Bianco
What begins as an entertaining adventure devolves into a silly overstuffed Tut fest -- part Mummy, part Moses, part The King and I.
Variety
Brian Lowry
The script doesn't withstand much scrutiny, placing a great deal of emphasis on Tut's legacy, when in fact he's remembered not for what he did but rather what he had - and indeed, the mere fact somebody happened to find it.
Uncle Barky
Ed Bark
The perception going in was that Tut would be a laughable feast. My truth going out is that it plays out much better than anticipated.
Oregonian
Kristi Turnquist
Despite some handsome visuals, colorful costumes and more eyeliner than in an entire season of RuPaul's Drag Race, Tut is as dry as the desert air.
New York Daily News
David Hinckley
Meanwhile, the soap keeps generating suds, while Kingsley plays it solemn and serious.
We Got This Covered
Mitchel Broussard
Suitably blood-drenched and lavish, but narratively hollow, Spike's new mini-series Tut is about as slow moving as the titular boy king's mummified corpse, and feels just as fresh.
Media Life
Tom Conroy
The good special effects, interiors and locations help keep our heads in the past, as do the actors' committed performances. In a better world, destiny, the gods and opportunity would have given the actors a better way to use their talent.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Rob Owen
The three-night six-hour miniseries... offers occasionally beautiful production design, but mostly Tut serves soggy melodrama that embraces every boy-to-king cliche one might imagine.
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