Lawrence of Arabia (review)Gone Native T.E. Lawrence was what a friend of mine calls a "transethnic," like the couple of Italian guys you always see playing bagpipes in the St. Patrick's Day Parade. Lawrence of Arabia's Lawrence (Peter O'Toole, who inhabits the role) tries to explain to an Arab friend how he is "different" from the "fat" people of his home in England's Oxfordshire, but he can't seem to make even himself understand. David Lean's gorgeous film -- one of the greatest movies ever made and one of my very favorites -- captures this enigmatic man beautifully. Even with its tradition of gentlemen soldiers, the British Army in Egypt doesn't seem to know quite what to do with the fey, Greek-philosophy-spouting Lawrence. But he has an affinity with the Arab peoples -- while the British military dismisses them as "a nation of sheep stealers," Lawrence sees them as real people and potentially valuable allies in the Great War against the Germans and their allies in the region, the Turks, traditional enemies of the Arabs. Sent to make an alliance with the Bedouin tribes in the desert, he succeeds in uniting -- if only temporarily -- squabbling tribes and leading them, though even the Arabs think his tactics are mad, on a breathtakingly daring attack on the Turkish stronghold of Aqaba. He becomes a symbol of freedom that the Arabs take to heart, inspiring an almost messianic fervor that Lawrence begins to believe in himself: The Arabs "hope to gain their freedom," Lawrence tells an American reporter. "They're going to get it. I'm going to give it to them." The sheer perfection of Lawrence of Arabia is demonstrated by the scene in which Lawrence first meets Sherif Ali (Omar Sharif) at a well in the middle of a flat desert stretching as far as the eye can see. The dialogue is minimal, every word necessary and on point as Lawrence and Ali feel each other out. The cinematography is as spare and lean and beautiful as the setting, heat shimmering off the distant horizon, the whole world nothing but sand and sky. It gives me chills just to think of it. I'm glad I got to see this film on a big screen when it was rereleased last year, because even a letterboxed video can't really do justice to Lean's vistas. In some ways Lawrence feels like it's made up of a series of still photographs, simple, elegant shots that linger and let you drink in the impossible magnificence of Lean's locations. It's like I've never seen the desert before on film. I actually notice the use here of color film -- instead of color just registering as my default way of seeing the world, I'm struck by the deliberate-seeming demarcation of blue sky and red-tan earth, the horizon bisecting every image. And the cherry on top of it all: one of the great movie scores, written by Maurice Jarre. This is a film for the ages. Best Picture 1962 previous Best Picture: previous AFI 100 film: Watch Lawrence of Arabia online using LOVEFiLM's streaming service. share
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Sun Feb 14 99, 6:26PM join the conversation: 1 pre-Disqus comments Disqus comments posted in: reviews > AFI 100 reviews > Oscar best pictures reviews > classics by MaryAnn Johanson infoMPAA: rated PG viewed at home on a small screen IMDb dvdAmazon US Amazon Canada Amazon UK read moreaction adventure based on fact biography drama epic historical spy war/antiwar related· Fairy Tale: A True Story (review) · I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell (review) · The Bridge on the River Kwai (review) · female gazing extra: “Men in Film” · the oh-no! DVD of the week: ‘Princess of Persia’ · Ridley Scott and Michael Fassbender talk Prometheus · Black Gold (trailer) · Melancholia (review) · The Ghost and the Darkness (review) · Alex “Repo Man” Cox insists you pirate his movies (and other adventures in social networking) bloggyprevious post: West Side Story (review) next post: Tom Jones (review) |










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posted by Jennifer Dodd (Wed Aug 25 10, 2:50AM)
Lawrence of Arabia will be playing in 70mm Panavision at the Museum of Civilization 70mm Film Festival in Ottawa, Canada Sept 24,25 & 26, 2010. I understand that Robert A. Harris, the restoration wizard will be in attendance. Several of his restorations will be screened at the festival. See: http://lostdominion.blogspot.com/