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Peter O'Toole

 
 
 
 
 

LAWRENCE OF ARABIA

                 
 

Columbia, 1962.  Directed by David Lean.  Camera:  F.A. Young.  With Peter O'Toole, Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn, Jack Hawkins, Omar Sharif, José Ferrer, Anthony Quayle, Claude Rains, Arthur Kennedy, Donald Wolfit, I.S. Johar, Gamil Ratib, Michel Ray, John Dimech, Zia Mohyeddin, Howard Marion Crawford, Jack Gwillim, Hugh Miller, Kenneth Fortescue, Stuart Saunders, Fernando Sancho, Henry Oscar, Norman Rossington, John Ruddock, M. Cher Kaoui, Mohammed Habachi.

 
 
     
 

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In 1916, British Intelligence supports the Arab rebellion against the Turkish-German alliance.  Dryden, a civilian member of the Arab Bureau, selects Lieut. T. E. Lawrence, an enigmatic 29-year-old scholar, to evaluate the Arab revolt.  Enthusiastically undertaking this assignment, the officer contacts Prince Faisal, a rebel leader, and persuades Faisal to lend him a force of 50 men.

With this skeleton band, accompanied by Sherif Ali, Lawrence crosses the Nefud Desert.  At the journey's end, however, Lawrence learns that one of his men is missing.  Undeterred by Arab assertions that the missing man's death had been divinely decreed, Lawrence returns to the desert and rescues him, earning thereby Ali's friendship and the respect of his subordinates.

At a well, Lawrence is confronted by the sheikh Auda Abu Tayi, whom he persuades to join the assault on Aqaba, a Turkish port at the desert's edge.  The Turks, surprised by the overland attack, are routed, and the victory revitalizes the Arab rebellion.

Arab unity, however, is undermined by internecine warfare.  When one of his troop slays one of Auda Abu Tayi's henchmen, Lawrence in expiation executes the murderer, who proves to be the Arab he had saved in the desert.  Unnerved, Lawrence returns to Cairo.

Delighted by Lawrence's military success, however, General Allenby provides him with arms and money for future victories.  Lawrence launches a series of successful guerrilla raids, which, as reported by American journalist Jackson Bentley, establish his international reputation.

While on a scouting mission with Ali, Lawrence is captured and tortured by the Turks. He returns to Cairo, where General Allenby persuades him to spearhead an attack on Damascus.  After the battle, Lawrence leads his men in the massacre of the retreating Turks.  Upon entering Damascus the British Army is met by victorious Arab forces.  Lawrence relinquishes control of the city to an Arab Council, but soon factionalism threatens to destroy it.

On May 19, 1935, Lawrence dies in a motorcycle crash in Dorset, England, and is commemorated in services at St. Paul's.

DVD Review by
Nick Zegarac,
Writer and
Film Reviewer
   
     

Notes
In the onscreen credits, the Assistant Art Directors are listed as "R. Rossotti, G. Richardson, T. Marsh, A. Rimmington."  A statement in the closing credits reads:  "Photographed on overseas locations."  The closing credits also acknowledge the Royal Hashemite Government of Jordan and the Royal Government of Morocco.

Works of T. E. Lawrence that were used as background for Lawrence of Arabia included Seven Pillars of Wisdom (London, 1926) and its abridgement, Revolt in the Desert (London, 1927), The Diary of T. E. Lawrence, MCMXI (London, 1937), and The Letters of T. E. Lawrence (London, 1938).

Portions of the film were shot on location in Saudi Arabia. At the time of the film's release, Michael Wilson, who was blacklisted in the 1950s, did not receive screen credit for co-writing the screenplay with Robert Bolt.  However, his credit was restored by the WGA in 1978, and in 1995, he was granted an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay for Lawrence of Arabia, an honor that initially had been bestowed solely on Bolt.  In video versions of the film, Wilson and Bolt are both credited with the screenplay.  Lawrence of Arabia was ranked 7th on AFI's 2007 100 Years...100 Movies - 10th Anniversary Edition list of the greatest American films, moving down from the 5th position it occupied on AFI's 1997 list.

American Film Institute Catalog

 

Poster artwork courtesy of Pete and Ivan

 
 
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