Lawrence of Arabia
Genre: adventure
and war drama
With: Peter
O Toole (T.E. Lawrence), Alec Guinness (Prince Faisal), Omar Sharif (Sherif Ali
Ibn El Kharish), Anthony Quinn (Auda Abu Tayi), Jack Hawkins (General Allenby),
José
Ferrer (the Turkish Bey), Anthony Quayle (Colonel Brighton), Claude Rains (Mr.
Dryden), Arthur Kennedy (Jackson Bentley), Donald Wolfit (General Murray), I.S.
Johar (Gasim), John Dimech (Daud), Michel Ray (Farraj)
Director:
David Lean
Screenplay:
Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson
Release: 1962
Studio: Horizon
Pictures, Sony Pictures Releasing International
Rating: PG
MBiS score: 8.9/10
– You figure that
you will have a democracy and a parliament?
– I’ll tell you when we have a country.
QuickView
Story-line:
Britain, 1935. While riding his motorcycle with abandon, T.E. Lawrence is
forced off the road and meets an unhappy fate. As his life, his death draws
mixed emotions. For some people, he was a figure from the past and nothing more,
for one former acquaintance, a mere office clerk in Cairo, for another, ‟a
poet, a philosopher, a mighty warrior… and the most shameless exhibitionist
since Barnum and Bailey”. This movie tells the story of the ordinary map drawer
who came to be known as ‟Lawrence of Arabia”.
Pluses: an awesome and intoxicating performance by
Peter O’Toole (in one of his earlier movie roles), great acting by Omar Sharif
(the strong and enigmatic Ali), Alec Guinness (Faisal, a very smooth operator),
Anthony Quinn (the hilarious brute) and other well-known thespians, a vigorous
screenplay that uses truthful dialogues and dry wit to weave scene after potent
scene, magical direction by David Lean, Freddie Young’s breathtaking
cinematography that glorifies the mighty desert, magnificent production values
and a musical theme (by Maurice Jarre) loved the world over.
Minuses: the script contains several insulting remarks
about Arabs − uttered mainly by diehard colonialists − but refutes them in an understated way. Viewers
who shun violence should note that LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, although a war movie,
doesn’t feature excessive bloodshed. Its only drawback would be its length if you have precious little time on your hands; in all other respects, this
Best Movie Oscar winner for 1962 should be on any movie buff’s priority list.
Comments: LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, a grand and perfect epic, is so different and fascinating that it doesn’t matter what judgment you pass on its main character. In my book, Lawrence was everything he was said to be − an adventurer, a messianic figure, one of the builders of the Arab nation − and his legacy still reverberates today in history and international politics. Kudos to David Lean and crew for this supreme accomplishment in cinematic art.
MBiS
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