There have been some fun Bible movies made about Ruth. They range from short cartoons for kids to big-scale epics for grownups. Here are five of them, with notes on where to find each movie and content guides for parents.

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5 Bible Movies about Ruth

5 Bible Movies about Ruth

Plenty of Bible movies are out there, but most focus on male heroes—David, Moses, and, of course, Jesus. Ruth is one of the most interesting women mentioned in the Bible, but her story is not easy to adapt. She’s brave—a foreigner who comes to believe in God and leaves everything behind to join her mother-in-law in a new home. She experiences a life filled with sadness—losing one husband—and grace—finding a new spouse and a new community.

However, the fact that the book of Ruth is such a short book makes it hard to tell in a feature-length movie. It’s also a small-scale story about relationships, with none of the shocking battle scenes and miracles we get in stories about someone like Samson or Daniel.

However, there have been a few Bible movies about Ruth. They range from short cartoons for kids to big-scale epics for grownups. Thanks to streaming, even some obscure movies about Ruth from the early days of filmmaking are now widely available.

Here are five notable Bible movies based on the story of Ruth. Each entry includes notes about where to find the movie and content guides for parents.

Further Reading: What Is the Story of Ruth in the Bible?

Photo Credit:©Getty/ZvonimirAtleti

  • Duke and the Great Pie War 2005 VeggieTales movie, movies about ruth

    1. Duke and the Great Pie War (2005)

    Recommended for Kids: Yes

    Where to Watch

    The VeggieTales series had a knack for retelling Bible stories in silly ways without losing sight of the original lesson. Their entry on the story of Ruth is one of their funniest

    Here, the story of Ruth, Naomi, and Boaz becomes a medieval comedy. Moab and Israel become two countries that have been at war in the past. Sweet Petunia and Nona (Ruth and Naomi) are refugees returning home after the conflict. A duke falls in love with Sweet Petunia but needs to challenge another lord connected to Nona’s estate before he can marry her.

    The movie leans heavily into slapstick comedy (cream pies flying, jousting going horribly wrong) and romantic comedy (the duke embarrassing himself as he tries to impress Sweet Petunia). However, the romance underlines how the story of Ruth may be one of the most romantic stories we see in the Old Testament. The emphasis on the Boaz character challenging someone who isn’t taking care of Naomi’s estate highlights how much this is a story about inheritance and the obligation to care for family.

    A cute, entertaining look at the story of Ruth for children.

    Further Reading: 3 Lessons from Ruth’s Heart of Gratitude

    Photo Credit:©Big Idea Entertainment

  • Ruth 1937 movie

    2. Ruth (1937)

    Recommended for Kids: Yes

    Where to Watch

    One of the shortest movies on this list, this 37-minute movie was unavailable for many years but is now available through Vision Video—online and on a two-movie DVD including an early Bible movie about Queen Esther.

    Like many lesser-known Bible movies from the 1930s, it feels more like a Bible pageant set to film than a proper movie. The dialogue is filled with moments where characters give stagey dialogue that lets the audience in on what they need to know—Ruth and her sister remembering their dead husbands as they go to tell Noami the famine is over, things like that. The dialogue offers one or two diversions from the biblical text. Still, the additions all involve characters talking about something implied in the text: Boaz receiving property that Ruth’s late husband inherited if he marries into Naomi’s family.

    While the presentation style makes everything a bit flat and stagey, it does have some advantages. The dialogue gives readers everything they need to know, making it a good option for showing people the story for the first time. The fact that the movie doesn’t go much beyond the original text makes it a short, compact look at the Bible story.

    It may not be the most exciting movie about Ruth, but it’s one of the shortest and most accurate.

    Further Reading: What Is the Story of Ruth and Naomi?

    Photo Credit: Fan image created by G. Connor Salter

  • Sight and Sound Ruth 2006

    3. Sight and Sound: Ruth (2006)

    Recommended for Kids: Yes

    Where to Watch

    Sight and Sound is well-known for its stage shows based on Bible stories. These shows are cute enough for the whole family and offer plenty of spectacle. Shows about Samson feature huge gates that Samson carries on his shoulders, and shows about Joseph may feature Joseph floating above the audience as he dreams about stars bowing down to him.

    The filmed version of the Sight and Sound show about Ruth may not be as fun as seeing the live show, but it’s well-filmed and shows all the familiar traits (the humor, the careful explanation of the Bible story’s themes). As Noah Lynch discusses, there are a few plausible fictional details in the production, mostly to bring out something we don’t often consider about the story. From the short section about Ruth marrying into Naomi’s family, we know that Ruth came from a pagan country, Moab. This production imagines those early scenes, including the pagan idolatry that would have surrounded Ruth in Moab—idolatry she must have struggled to give up before she became the woman who said to Naomi, “Your god, my god.”

     An entertaining, family-friendly, epic-scale look at the biblical story.

    Further Reading: What Does the Bible Tell Us about Ruth’s First Husband?

    Photo Credit:©Sight and Sound TV

  • The Story of Ruth 1960

    4. The Story of Ruth (1960)

    Recommended for Kids: Maybe

    Where to Watch

    If the 1937 Ruth is a short, simple look at Ruth’s story, this 1960 technicolor movie is one of the longest, most elaborate adaptations.

    Since the old-school biblical epics were as much about costumes and melodrama as getting the story right, there’s a long first act about Ruth being selected as a child sacrifice for Moabite deities. When a surprising twist (God’s grace?) rescues her from death, she grows up to become the woman who does what her culture finds highly strange: marrying a foreigner, then leaving her gods and home behind her.

    The Story of Ruth may expand on the biblical text in some creative ways, but it never does it in ridiculous ways that contradict the real story. Like the Sight and Sound movie, the extended first act about Ruth’s life before coming to Israel has some advantages. In this case, it makes room for scenes of her meeting and falling in love with Naomi’s son. The emphasis on Ruth’s first love reminds us that Ruth was a widow when she met Boaz, and while we assume they loved each other, it was a sweet ending to a story with a bitter beginning.

    Less excessive than many biblical epics, and still worth watching decades later.

    Further Reading: What Ruth's Story Can Teach Us about Suffering and Sorrow

    Photo Credit:©Twentieth Century Studios

  • The Testament The Bible in Animation series

    5. Testament: Ruth (1996)

    Recommended for Kids: Yes

    Where to Watch

    The 1996 show Testament: The Bible in Animation isn’t as easy to find as Bible shows like VeggieTales or The Greatest Heroes and Legends of the Bible. However, it’s well worth seeking out because its nine episodes adapted major Bible stories with more care, better animation, and usually more fidelity to the text than almost any other Bible cartoon series.

    The episode on Ruth is especially good because it doesn’t simplify the story too much for viewers. Some scenes from this story often get left out—like the other kinsman-redeemer giving Boaz his sandal, a way for people in their culture to show a legal transaction had occurred, that he was giving up his legal right to the land to Boaz. This adaptation includes these funny cultural details, expecting children who watch the episode to ask the right questions or know about it already. It doesn’t talk down to anyone in the audience.

    While the simple stop-motion animation may not offer detailed facial reactions like in Duke and the Great Pie War, the animation captures Ruth and Naomi's sadness from the start. The plot also strongly emphasizes the risk (Elimelech’s family carrying little as they move to Moab) and the sadness (Naomi, Ruth, and Orpah watching their husbands be buried). The production may not have the budget or spectacle of some other movies about Ruth, but the careful plotting captures Ruth’s grief and her leap of faith in a compelling way without too many frills.

    A beautifully-told, underrated adaption of the story.

    Further Reading: Ruth: Sex, Race, and God’s Sovereignty at Work

    Photo Credit:©BBC Wales/S4C/Christmas Films

    Connor SalterG. Connor Salter has contributed over 1,400 articles to various publications, including interviews for Christian Communicator and book reviews for The Evangelical Church Library Association. In 2020, he won First Prize for Best Feature Story in a regional contest by the Colorado Press Association Network. In 2024, he was cited as the editor for Leigh Ann Thomas' article "Is Prayer Really That Important?" which won Third Place (Articles Online) at the Selah Awards hosted by the Blue Ridge Christian Writers Conference.