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| Peter O'Toole | T.E. Lawrence |
| Alec Guinness | Prince Feisal |
| Anthony Quinn | Auda abu Tayi |
| Jack Hawkins | Gen. Allenby |
| Omar Sharif | Sherif Ali ibn el Kharish |
| Claude Rains | Mr. Dryden |
| José Ferrer | Turkish Bey |
| Anthony Quayle | Col. Harry Brighton |
| Arthur Kennedy | Jackson Bentley |
| Donald Wolfit | Gen. Murray |
| I.S. Johar | Gasim |
| Michael Ray | Farraj |
| Gamil Ratib | Majid |
| John Dimech | Daud |
| Hugh Miller | RAMC Colonel |
| Kenneth Fortescue | Allenby's Aide |
| Harry Fowler | Cpl. Potter |
| Jack Gwyllim | Club Secretary |
| Jack Hedley | Reporter |
| Howard Marion-Crawford | Medical Officer |
| Zia Mohyeddin | Tafas |
| Henry Oscar | Reciter |
| Norman Rossington | Corporal Jenkins |
| John Ruddock | Elder Harith |
| Fernando Sancho | Turkish Sergeant |
| Stuart Saunders | Regimental Sergeant Major |
| David Lean | Director, Producer |
| Robert Bolt | Screenwriter |
| John Box | Production Designer |
| Anne V. Coates | Editor |
| John Cox | Sound/Sound Designer |
| Phyllis Dalton | Costumes/Costume Designer |
| Ernest Day | Camera Operator |
| Maurice Jarre | Score Composer |
| Tony Masters | Production Designer |
| John Palmer | Production Manager |
| Charles Parker | Makeup |
| Cliff John Richardson | Special Effects |
| Tony Rimmington | Asst. Director |
| Dario Simoni | Set Decoration/Design |
| Maude Spector | Casting |
| Sam Spiegel | Producer |
| Roy Stevens | Asst. Director |
| John Stoll | Art Director |
| Morris W. Stoloff | Musical Direction/Supervision |
| Michael Wilson | Screenwriter |
| Freddie Young | Cinematographer |
Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
David Lean¿s 'Lawrence of Arabia' ranks among a handful of truly outstanding, thoroughly deserving Academy Award winning classics. The film has an epic sweep that is both grand and brilliantly conceived, if fictional in its account of the life of T.E. Lawrence. The plot follows Lawrence from his modest beginnings as a somewhat backward and generally bored British officer working in a map room in Cairo. He is plucked from obscurity by Allenbee (Claude Raines) and given the opportunity of a lifetime as special envoy to the Arab Prince Fisel (Alec Guinness). However, after invading and conquering Damascus, Lawrence¿s rise as a cult figure begins to swell his own pride and ego which gradually leads to his own demise. In his debut film appearance, Peter O'Toole delivers a tour de force as the introspective, self appointed master of all he oversees. Omar Shariff is masterful and commanding as Sheriff Ali. Ali¿s initial skepticism toward Lawrence dissolves into a friendship that is both weakened and galvanized through the passage of time. Evergreen chameleon, Alec Guinness is marvelous as Prince Fisel. Shortly after the film¿s world premiere, all prints were cut down in order to accommodate more nightly viewings. David Lean never approved of these cuts but was given the opportunity to revisit ¿Lawrence of Arabia¿ some thirty years later and restore all of the missing footage. The absence of certain audio portions meant that surviving principle cast members were called back in to re-record their lines. The net results of this restoration work were then considered cutting edge. But about the DVDs; ¿Lawrence of Arabia¿ was previously presented in a handsome double disc set from Columbia Tri-Star, then as a single disc, and now, in a supposedly remastered Superbit edition. Film restorer, Robert A. Harris has color corrected the original restoration negative that he previously worked on. The results are a much smoother, more vibrant print with richer, deeper colors that do justice to the film¿s rich texture and starkly beautiful surroundings. Unfortunately, Columbia (after promising they would remove it) has left in all the edge enhancement that was present on the previous DVD transfers. Fine details shimmer excessively in certain scenes. Much of the latter half of the film is plagued by halo effects and a considerable amount of pixelization. These effects are terribly distracting. Despite Superbit's claim to offer the best picture quality available to the home consumer - this disc simply does not hold up! Also, the break in the film DOES NOT come at the intermission, where one might expect it. While the Superbit doctrine claims that this has been done in order to preserve the integrity of the image quality, it is difficult to take that claim serious when DVD transfers like 'Hello Dolly!' have managed to fit their entire 144 min. running time onto a single sided disc with no traces of edge enhancement or shimmering included! The audio has been further cleaned up and, for the most part, sounds wonderful. There are no extras on the Superbit edition. The 2 disc special edition includes an audio commentary, an extensive making of documentary, several featurettes and theatrical trailers made at the time the film was being conceived.
7 out of 7 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
I am partly posting this in response to the other reviews. This film is an acknowledged masterpiece. It is an engrossing, beautifully shot, remarkably acted work. The dissolving of Lawrence as the war wears on him is as intimate a character study as you will see even as it is on the backdrop of war and struggle in the dessert. Insightful and prescient, it is even more relevant today. Worth watching if only for the justifiably ballyhooed "mirage" shot. Any lover of movies who doesn't hold Transformers in high regard owes it to themselves to see this.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
Lawrence of Arabia is a wonderful film because there is a certain amount of depth that you just don't find in many good films anymore. It told the story of how T.E. lawrence led the arab revolt, a story very few people know about. The acting is superb and the musical score is beautiful as well as the sets. You should watch this film because it is not only entertainment, but contains a good deal of history in it.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
I find it sad and rather frightening that people can give a movie like Lawrence of Arabia three stars. IT IS A CLASSIC! There is no doubt about it, Lawrence of Arabia is one of the greatest movies of all time. Winner of Best Picture, Number five on AFI's Top 100 Movies...NUMBER FIVE! How can anyone give such a great movie THREE STARS! It has action, adventure, drama, and some of the best acting I've ever seen by Peter O Toole. Even more importantly, it gives you a look into the mind and soul of one man...T.E. Lawrence.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I vaguely remembered this movie when it originally came out. I remembered Peter O'Toole, and the photographic vistas. And the music.
At the time of this purchase, I was thinking adventure movie, a Middle Eastern setting, English school gent in a war in the desert.
Yup. Got that.
Note I am not a history buff, my interest was simply story and movie. Inside of the story and movie, the five actors listed above, the unfolding of the events, and their interplay, was worth this second viewing.
One wonders, aside from parameters of scale, if there's much difference today when the thousand-year old cultures of the Middle East allow Western industrial culture, eg. the Brits, to play in the sands of their deserts.
At the very least, it's an adventure.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.The music, the setting, the story line and the acting all make this film one of the all time greats. One that needs to be in everyones library of films. Hollywood just does not make movies like this anymore.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I was surprised to realize that I'd never watched David Lean's 1962 epic "Lawrence of Arabia." It was well worth the wait. At once a huge story of international politics and the British-backed Arabian fight for freedom from the Ottoman Empire, it's also an intensely personal story of one man's journey from nobody to historic figure, and how it almost breaks him.
Peter O'Toole is brilliant as the enigmatic T.E. Lawrence, but I actually found myself drawn more to the supporting characters -- Sherif Ali (Omar Sharif), Auda Abu Tayi (Anthony Quinn), and Prince Feisal (the chameleonlike Alec Guinness). Beautifully filmed, and with one of the most memorable film scores of all time, "Lawrence" really lives up to the adjective "masterpiece." My only regret is that I don't have a larger TV screen on which to appreciate the stunning visuals.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
This is one of my favorite movies. It has great acting and was filmed beautifully.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 1, 2010
First off, who in their right mind would make a 3+ hour movie about some dude roaming the desert? You spend five minutes alone with Lawrence, and then it’s off to the boring desert. You spend an hour chasing a guy who is lost in the desert and Lawrence goes after him! How more stupid can you get? His reason for going to the desert is ‘It’s clean.’ I mean, come on! It’s stupid, dull, and the action is as about as exiting as that of a wine commercial. I fell asleep while watching this film. My advice is just stay away or you’ll wonder what you could have been doing with those 3+ hours.
1 out of 14 people found this review helpful.
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Posted October 1, 2010
This film makes me want to puke. I have never seen a movie that has disappointed me. But I must say the phrase, I stand corrected. The people who made this must have been drunk or high on meth. Who can tell? The reasons for getting the film is to torture your family and friends or to cure insomnia. That’s it. So just don’t by it. Trust me.
0 out of 12 people found this review helpful.
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Posted December 12, 2001
''He was the most extraordinary man I ever knew.'' One of the greatest movies of all time!This great screen epic, starring an amazing Peter O'Toole (in his first major role) as T. E. Lawrence, is a masterpiece of cinema, and director David Lean's best work (which says a lot). The story concerns Lawrence's revolt against Turkey during World War I. Besides being a brilliant historical epic, the film is also a brilliant character piece; O'Toole's performance and the insightful screenplay bring Lawrence's character to life as few characters of cinema ever have. You will never forget these characters!!
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted March 7, 2009
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Posted February 1, 2009
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Posted November 25, 2012
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Posted December 4, 2008
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Posted November 23, 2009
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Posted September 7, 2009
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Posted November 29, 2009
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Posted October 15, 2009
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Posted January 9, 2010
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