Is Prince of Egypt and Joseph King of Dreams related?

Joseph: King of Dreams is a 2000 American direct-to-video animated biblical musical drama film. The film is an adaptation of the story of Joseph from the Book of Genesis in the Bible and serves as a prequel to the 1998 film The Prince of Egypt (as the biblical narrative of Joseph happens before that of Moses).

Who is Joseph King of Dreams father?

Jacob
In Joseph: King of Dreams. Joseph is the son of Jacob and Rachel. Joseph was gifted with seemingly strange dreams, and also the ability to interpret them. Because he was born of Rachel, and not Jacob’s other wife, Joseph was special because Rachel was supposedly barren and couldn’t have children.

Was Joseph attacked by wolves?

While they go swimming, a wolf pack attacks the flock and Joseph is nearly killed until Jacob fights them off and saves him. The brothers then bring Joseph’s torn and bloodied coat to Jacob and Rachel, who are heartbroken and are led to think he was killed by wolves.

Who wrote the music for Joseph King of Dreams?

Danny Pelfrey
Joseph: King of Dreams/Music composed by

How old was Joseph in King of Dreams?

Joseph was 30 years old when he interpreted the Pharaoh’s dream and 39 when his brother came into Egypt. Joseph’s parents are cousins because Jacob’s uncle is Rachael’s father. Joseph lived to be 110 years old in Egypt.

How did Joseph brother get rid of him?

(Genesis 37:1–11) They saw their chance when they were feeding the flocks, the brothers saw Joseph from afar and plotted to kill him. They turned on him and stripped him of the coat his father made for him, and threw him into a pit. Judah, the strongest, thought twice about killing Joseph and proposed that he be sold.

What was the budget for Joseph King of Dreams?

$282 million against a $127 million production budget plus a maximum $175 million marketing budget; write-down of $13.5 million.

Why did God allow Joseph to suffer?

Joseph put it this way: “You (brothers of mine) meant to harm me, BUT GOD intended it for a good purpose, so He could preserve the lives of many people…” (Genesis 50:20).