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Lawrence of Arabia

Lawrence of Arabia

List Price: $28.98
Your Price: $23.18
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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fascinating Subject, Brilliant Director
Review: Combine one of the most fascinating figures in history along with the directing efforts of one of the unquestioned giants of twentieth century cinema and you have the winning combination that exemplifies the 1962 international blockbuster, "Lawrence of Arabia."

T.E. Lawrence was an enigma to himself as well as those around him. Too short to qualify for the British Army during World War One, Lawrence was given entry by special exemption. Due to his passionate love for Middle East arcana, substantiated by archivist visits to the area, the erudite Lawrence was put in the Cairo Bureau office headed by General Edmund Allenby. He proved an irritant and puzzle to the Sandhurst military types he confronted due to his uncanny ability to unearth the most minute details from maps as well as for his unconventionality, highlighted by an absence of military protocol.

A deal was ultimately struck in which Allenby, believing that perhaps Lawrence could aid the British cause in the field, assigned him to the Arabian dessert in what would be described as a freelance effort. His superior officers in the Cairo Bureau were delighted since he made them feel awkward and they were happy to rid themselves of someone they considered a young upstart lacking the requisite mindset to be a good British soldier.

The rest is history as Lawrence was able to achieve unity by bringing together disparate tribal warriors who generally fought each other. He filled them with incentive to rid themselves of the rule of Turkey's Ottoman Empire. Those familiar with the hit and run tactics of the Viet Cong in the Vietnam War will see similarities in the way that Lawerence's warriors wait for the opportune moment, then strike when the better equipped, far more numerous Turkish forces are least aware.

The project of bringing Lawerence's fascinating life to the screen was a challenge of veteran British director David Lean, who also crafted "The Bridge on the River Kwai" and "Doctor Zhivago". In the manner of "Lawrence of Arabia," the other films were also magnificent technicolor dramas with broad international scope. Screenwriter Robert Bolt crafted his superb script from Lawrence's autobiography, "The Seven Pillars of Wisdom." I found Lawrence fascinating enough to concentrate a lengthy chapter on him in my Middle East historical work, "Struggle for the Holy Land." Lawrence is brilliantly captured on screen by Peter O'Toole,who vaulted to international stardom with this role. The film won 7 Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Cinematography.

William Hare

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Can't deny it, this film is one of the best
Review: David Lean's Bridge On the River Kwai is said to be his best work...not in my opinion, it's second to this epic masterpiece.

His wide span of the camera over deserts and mountains in this film is breathtaking. His characters become remarkable by the end. But most of all, the film's narrative study of the title character is sumptuous of all...bravo bravo.

O'Toole, Sharif, and Quinn gives career making performances...not to mention performances that would bring about Oscars.

And like Gone With the Wind, Ben Hur and Titanic...this film deserved many Oscars and nominations for Oscars. And like those three other masterful epics, this is a film that will stand the test of time.

Again, bravo bravo bravo!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What More Can be Said?
Review: I hsd not seen "Lawrence of "Arabia" until recently, when I selected it from my growing DVD collection to watch on the tv at the foot of my sickbed. zfrom start to finish, I was enthralled. Other reviewers have said, much better than I could," why this film is a triumph in every way a motion picture can be. For me, this has been a eye-opener, a repudiation of the snobbish "Oh, it can't be THAT good" attitude that kept me from going to see some of the better films of my youth. Now, with DVD and bigscreen television, I am getting a second chance. I saw nothing I did not find fabulous, and I could not recommend this film more highly. It is an absolute"must see."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Epic Defined
Review: This is the greatest epic ever filmed. Back in the day when religious and historical epics were more abundant, this one stood out above the rest. With the passage of time it's reputation and standing have only increased. It's amazing to think that David Lean could sustain this level of brilliance for three movies in a row. It as a tour de force in every way. The directing is wonderful, the writing, the editing, the acting. There really aren't enough good things to say about this movie. If you have never seen it, you are in for a treat. It is as visually entertaining as you will ever see. It truly is the standard by which all large scale movies should be judged. It takes more than just a big budget to make an epic, you need a larger than life character, great story, and it has to be presented in an interesting way. David Lean and Peter O'Toole bring everything that they have to this movie. A Stunning achievment of the highest level. They're aren't enough stars to give out for this one. See it. You won't regret it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Review on Lawrence of Arabia
Review: An excellent, dateless, ageless film--wonderful, thrilling and moving. The countless extra footage is priceless; each actor's performance better than the next. No wonder the film won so many awards. Too bad so many of today's same-genre films substitute noise and special effects for the excellent filmaking displayed in this film. I loved the dvd so much, that I'm ordering one for my 26 year old son.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best
Review: Simply the best of the best - enough said. All that needs to be said. Don't watch this at your peril.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: great movie, bad history
Review: I won't comment on the cinematographic value of this movie as I don't think that I have anything to add to the reviews already posted. What I will say is that although this movie is truly a work of art, it is deeply flawed because of its dangerously false account of history. Generally speaking, for the most part the arab characters in the movie are made to appear simple, cruel, greedy, ie the usual treatment for arabs in Hollywood. But that isn't really what bothers me; the worst comes at the end of the movie, when the arab army headed by Lawrence reach Damascus. In the movie they are shown to argue for a total of two days after which they return to desert having achieved nothing. Supposedly they were unable to govern the city themselves, basically leaving the door open for France to move in with clean hands.

In reality however, the arab administration lasted not for two days but for two years. The nomads from the desert didn't try to run the city themselves - they were uneducated, but they weren't that stupid. They made use of the inhabitants of the city who had been running the place before and who did just as good a job under arab governance. The only reason they left the city was because they were forced to... by the French army. Hence the film didn't get it quite right, which is a problem and a great shame. I know it seems absurd, but maybe the best solution would be for this film to continue being shown and respected as much as it is, but for it to run a proviso at the beginning mentioning that its account of history is inaccurate, seeing as it purports to be a film based on actual historic events.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Watch this Epic to understand what we've lost as Moviegoers
Review: This spectacular masterpiece by the widescreen maestro is incomparable. The images contained within this film are indeliable, when the phrase "every frame a Rembrandt" is used as the mantra for exceptional cinematography, this film is what they are talking about.

Every aspect of this film is epic - far too many to recite here - and the DVD chronicles it's lengthy, incredible production masterly. The presentation (sound & video) is benchmark, and considering that the film is close to 40 years old it looks as if it was shot yesterday. Large format cinema has sadly all but vanished from narrative film, but we can always look back this film in awe and wonder.

From Maurice Jarre's ethereal score and Robert Bolt's enigamic, yet involving characterization of Lawrence to the fantastic acting by O'Toole, Sharif, and Quinn and startling production design by John Box, one almost has to shed tears in light of the fact that we can no longer see films of this length, style, presentation and quality.

Yet it can live again on a HDTV through DVD, nostalgia is usually fairly dangerous when it comes to art, but you can make an exception for this film.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the most visually stunning movies ever made....
Review: T.E. Lawrence was perhaps the first perfect example of a mass-culture hero to come out of the First World War. The English soldier, writer and adventurer went by several names, but history remembers him as "Lawrence of Arabia". By taking an honors degree from Oxford in history with a thesis on Crusader castles, an ambitious project that required extensive field work in remote regions, he was able to examine three dozen Crusader castles--an achievement which prepared him very well for service in the Middle East by 1916. In the process, Lawrence conceived a romantic admiration for the Arabs during these archeological expeditions and learned Arabic while a student in Oxford.

It took almost two years to finish filming director David Lean's epic masterpiece. And this will always be better seen on a wide screen. There is no substitute for it, however seeing this on DVD in an HDTV capable widescreen would be a close second. I just have to have this film on DVD even though I have this in VHS, and what a difference. One can almost feel the shimmering heat of the sprawling desert sands and cinematographer Freddie Young (one of seven Academy Awards) captures flawlessly the sprawling sands of the immense Arabian desert. It is a place that can only be conquered by those with the right fortitude of body and mind, and in the film Peter O'Toole (as Lawrence) demonstrates (or should one say--showed off) the necessary stoic capacity to endure pain by snuffing out lighted matches with his fingers on a regular basis, without wincing. In campaigns in the desert, Lawrence inspired his men with his willingness to share their extreme hardships, and fought on even after being flogged by the local pederastic Bey in Dera (played by Jose Ferrer), and perhaps because of that incident, it transformed him into a more complex man. By showing how he transformed a motley gang of tribesmen into an effective guerilla force and becoming the chief strategist for the whole Bedouin army, temporarily converting its self-interested leaders to his vision of a unified Arab nation---will probably be the single most redeeming quality of this great film. He did not hesitate to castigate his Arab cohorts like Sherif Ali Ibn El Kharish (played by Omar Shariff): "Sherif Ali, so long as the Arabs fight tribe against tribe, so long will they be little people, a silly people--greedy, barbarous, and cruel, as you are." Beyond question was his crucial role in driving the Turks from Syria and western Arabia, the centerpiece being their capture of the Turkish fort of Aqaba, by crossing the Nefud desert and capturing it on the landward side--a thing considered impossible by the Turks in those days (which shows why their big guns are all pointing out to sea). It is just one of the spectacular scenes in this film.

Loosely based on Lawrence's "The Seven Pillars of Wisdom" (published in 1926), an abridgment came out later as "Revolt in the Desert", it showed, as in the film, that he was a man of action who felt defiled by his actions, and a soldier painfully conscious of being an agent of British imperialism. He was a writer eager for fame, but he was psychically devastated by the war's horrors and its betrayal of his ideals. Lawrence, perhaps more than anything else embodied the dissolution of British class heirarchies in the ordeal of war. After the war he received a number of honors and was offered but refused the Victoria Cross and a knighthood.

Though it never tried to explain why he was impelled sometimes to embellish his achievement and then repudiate the fame they offered him, this is one great film about one chapter in the life of an enigmatic and complex man. Perhaps that will always be Lawrence's legacy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My completely superfluous rave
Review: Given the thunderous universal acclaim for this masterpiece of world cinema, I feel stupid chiming in with my pipsqueak, "I like it too!" But I love this film so much that I'll do it anyway. Every aspect of it is perfect, of course, but I especially thrill to the writing. There can't be another screenplay in history with so many great lines. And, needless to say, we're not talking about "Yippee-kie-aye, mother....." here. It's one of the very, very, very few screenplays that approach the status of literature. It's a see-before-you-die picture if ever there was one.


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