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Lawrence of Arabia (film)

Lawrence of Arabia is a 1962 British epic historical drama film based on the life of T. E. Lawrence and his 1926 book Seven Pillars of Wisdom. It was directed by David Lean and produced by Sam Spiegel, through his British company Horizon Pictures and distributed by Columbia Pictures. The film stars Peter O'Toole as Lawrence with Alec Guinness playing Prince Faisal. The film also stars Jack Hawkins, Anthony Quinn, Omar Sharif, Anthony Quayle, Claude Rains and Arthur Kennedy. The screenplay was written by Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson.

Lawrence of Arabia
Theatrical release poster by Howard Terpning
Directed byDavid Lean
Screenplay by
Based onSeven Pillars of Wisdom
by T. E. Lawrence
Produced bySam Spiegel
Starring
CinematographyFreddie A. Young
Edited byAnne V. Coates
Music byMaurice Jarre
Production
company
Distributed byColumbia Pictures[1]
Release date
  • 10 December 1962 (1962-12-10)
Running time
210 minutes[2]
CountryUnited Kingdom[3]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$15 million[4]
Box office$70 million[4]

The film depicts Lawrence's experiences in the Ottoman provinces of Hejaz and Greater Syria during the First World War, in particular his attacks on Aqaba and Damascus and his involvement in the Arab National Council. Its themes include Lawrence's emotional struggles with the violence inherent in war, his identity and his divided allegiance between his native Britain with its army, and his new-found comrades within the Arabian desert tribes.

The film was nominated for ten Oscars at the 35th Academy Awards in 1963, winning seven including Best Picture and Best Director. It also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama and the BAFTA Awards for Best Film and Outstanding British Film. The dramatic score by Maurice Jarre and the Super Panavision 70 cinematography by Freddie Young also won praise from critics.

Lawrence of Arabia is widely regarded as one of the greatest films ever made. In 1991, it was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.[5][6] In 1998, the American Film Institute placed it fifth on their 100 Years...100 Movies list of the greatest American films and it ranked seventh on their 2007 updated list. In 1999, the British Film Institute named the film the third-greatest British film. In 2004, it was voted the best British film in a Sunday Telegraph poll of Britain's leading filmmakers.

Plot

The film is presented in two parts, divided by an intermission.

Part I

In 1935, T. E. Lawrence dies in a motorcycle accident. At his memorial service at St Paul's Cathedral, a reporter tries, with little success, to gain insights into the remarkable, enigmatic man from those who knew him.

During the First World War, Lawrence is a misfit British Army lieutenant who is notable for his insolence and education. Over the objections of General Murray, Mr. Dryden of the Arab Bureau sends him to assess the prospects of Prince Faisal in his revolt against the Turks. On the journey, his Bedouin guide, Tafas, is killed by Sherif Ali ibn el Kharish for drinking from his well without permission. Lawrence later meets Colonel Brighton, who orders him to keep quiet, make his assessment, and leave. Lawrence ignores Brighton's orders when he meets Faisal; his outspokenness piques the prince's interest.

Brighton advises Faisal to retreat after a major defeat, but Lawrence proposes a daring surprise attack on Aqaba. Its capture would provide a port from which the British could offload much-needed supplies. The town is strongly fortified against a naval assault but only lightly defended on the landward side. He convinces Faisal to provide fifty men, led by a pessimistic Sherif Ali. The teenage orphans Daud and Farraj attach themselves to Lawrence as servants, and Lawrence develops a fatherly affection for them. They cross the Nefud Desert, considered impassable even by the Bedouins, and travel day and night on the last stage to reach water. One of Ali's men, Gasim, succumbs to fatigue and falls off his camel unnoticed during the night. When Lawrence discovers him missing, he turns back and rescues Gasim. Won over, Ali burns Lawrence's uniform and gives him Arab robes to wear. The men accept Lawrence as one of their own.

Lawrence persuades Auda Abu Tayi, the leader of the powerful local Howeitat tribe, to turn against the Turks. Lawrence's scheme is almost derailed when one of Ali's men kills one of Auda's because of a blood feud. Since retaliation by the Howeitat would shatter the fragile alliance, Lawrence declares that he will execute the murderer himself. Lawrence is then stunned to discover that the culprit is Gasim, the man he risked his own life to save, but shoots him anyway.

The next morning, the Arabs overrun the Turkish garrison. Lawrence heads to Cairo with Daud and Farraj to inform Dryden and the new commander, General Allenby, of his victory. While crossing the Sinai Desert, Daud dies when he stumbles into quicksand, much to Lawrence and Farraj's grief. Although his report of Aqaba's capture is initially disbelieved, Lawrence is promoted to major and given arms and money for the Arabs. He is deeply disturbed and confesses that he enjoyed executing Gasim, but Allenby brushes aside his qualms. Lawrence asks Allenby whether there is any basis for the Arabs' suspicions that the British have designs on Arabia. When pressed, Allenby states that there is none.

Part II

Lawrence launches a guerrilla war by blowing up the Ottoman railway between Damascus and Medina and harassing the Turks at every turn. An American war correspondent, Jackson Bentley, publicises Lawrence's exploits and makes him famous. On one raid, Farraj is badly injured. Unwilling to leave him to be tortured by the enemy, Lawrence reluctantly shoots him dead and then flees.

When Lawrence scouts the enemy-held city of Deraa with Ali, he is taken, along with several Arab residents, to the Turkish Bey. Lawrence is stripped, ogled, and prodded. Then, for striking out at the Bey, he is severely flogged before he is thrown into the street, where Ali comes to his aid. The experience leaves Lawrence shaken. He returns to British headquarters in Cairo but does not fit in.

A short time later in Jerusalem, General Allenby urges him to support the "big push" on Damascus. Lawrence hesitates to return but finally relents.

Lawrence recruits an army that is motivated more by money than by the Arab cause. They sight a column of retreating Turkish soldiers, who have just massacred the residents of Tafas. One of Lawrence's men is from Tafas and demands, "No prisoners!" When Lawrence hesitates, the man charges the Turks alone and is killed. Lawrence takes up the dead man's battle cry; the result is a slaughter in which Lawrence himself participates, despite Ali's protests. He regrets his actions thereafter.

Lawrence's men take Damascus ahead of Allenby's forces. The Arabs set up a council to administer the city, but the British cut off access to the public utilities, leaving the desert tribesmen to debate how to maintain the occupation. Despite Lawrence's efforts, they bicker constantly, and soon abandon most of the city to the British.

Lawrence is promoted to colonel and immediately ordered back to Britain, as his usefulness to both Faisal and the British is at an end. As he leaves the city, he looks longingly at the departing Arabs before his car is passed by a motorcyclist, who leaves a trail of dust in his wake. The chauffeur remarks that Lawrence is on his way home, but Lawrence does not reply.

Cast

  • Peter O'Toole as T. E. Lawrence. Albert Finney was a virtual unknown at the time but he was Lean's first choice to play Lawrence. Finney was cast and began principal photography but was fired after two days for reasons that are still unclear. Marlon Brando was also offered the part while Anthony Perkins and Montgomery Clift were briefly considered before O'Toole was cast.[7] Alec Guinness had played Lawrence in the play Ross and was briefly considered for the part but Lean and Spiegel thought him too old. Lean had seen O'Toole in The Day They Robbed the Bank of England (1960) and was bowled over by his screen test, proclaiming, "This is Lawrence!" Spiegel disliked Clift, having worked with him on Suddenly, Last Summer (1959). Spiegel eventually acceded to Lean's choice. Pictures of Lawrence suggest also that O'Toole bore some resemblance to him, though at 6 feet 2 inches (1.88 m) tall O'Toole was significantly taller than Lawrence.[8] O'Toole's looks prompted a different reaction from Noël Coward, who quipped after seeing the première of the film, "If you had been any prettier, the film would have been called Florence of Arabia".[9]
  • Alec Guinness as Prince Faisal. Faisal was originally to be portrayed by Laurence Olivier. Guinness performed in other David Lean films and he got the part when Olivier dropped out. Guinness was made up to look as much like the real Faisal as possible; he recorded in his diaries that, while shooting in Jordan, he met several people who had known Faisal who actually mistook him for the late prince. Guinness said in interviews that he developed his Arab accent from a conversation that he had with Omar Sharif.
  • Anthony Quinn as Auda abu Tayi. Quinn got very much into his role; he spent hours applying his own makeup, using a photograph of the real Auda to make himself look as much like him as he could. One anecdote has Quinn arriving on-set for the first time in full costume, whereupon Lean mistook him for a native and asked his assistant to ring Quinn and notify him that they were replacing him with the new arrival.
  • Jack Hawkins as General Edmund Allenby. Spiegel pushed Lean to cast Cary Grant or Laurence Olivier (who was engaged at the Chichester Festival Theatre and declined). Lean convinced him to choose Hawkins because of his work for them on The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957). Hawkins shaved his head for the role and reportedly clashed with Lean several times during filming. Guinness recounted that Hawkins was reprimanded by Lean for celebrating the end of a day's filming with an impromptu dance. Hawkins became close friends with O'Toole during filming, and the two often improvised dialogue during takes to Lean's dismay.
  • Omar Sharif as Sherif Ali ibn el Kharish. The role was offered to many actors before Sharif was cast. Horst Buchholz was the first choice but had already signed on for the film One, Two, Three. Alain Delon had a successful screen test but ultimately declined because of the brown contact lenses he would have had to wear. Maurice Ronet and Dilip Kumar were also considered.[10] Sharif, who was already a major star in the Middle East, was originally cast as Lawrence's guide Tafas but when the other actors proved unsuitable, Sharif was shifted to the part of Ali. A combination of numerous Arab leaders, particularly Sharif Nassir, Faisal's cousin, who led the Harith forces involved in the attack on Aqaba, this character was created largely because Lawrence did not serve with any one Arab leader (aside from Auda) throughout the majority of the war; most such leaders were amalgamated in Ali's character.
  • José Ferrer as the Turkish Bey. Ferrer was initially unsatisfied with the small size of his part and accepted the role only on the condition of being paid $25,000 (more than O'Toole and Sharif combined) plus a Porsche.[11] Afterwards, Ferrer considered this his best film performance, saying in an interview: "If I was to be judged by any one film performance, it would be my five minutes in Lawrence". Peter O'Toole once said that he learned more about screen acting from Ferrer than he could in any acting class. According to Lawrence in Seven Pillars of Wisdom, this was General Hajim Bey (in Turkish, Hacim Muhiddin Bey), though the film does not name him. Biographers including Jeremy Wilson and John Mack have argued that Lawrence's account is to be believed; others including Michael Asher and Lawrence James argue that contemporary evidence suggests that Lawrence never went to Deraa at this time and that the story is invented.
  • Anthony Quayle as Colonel Harry Brighton. Quayle, a veteran of military roles, was cast after Jack Hawkins, the original choice, was shifted to the part of Allenby. Quayle and Lean argued over how to portray the character, with Lean feeling Brighton to be an honourable character, while Quayle thought him an idiot. He is in essence a composite of all of the British officers who served in the Middle East with Lawrence, most notably Lt. Col. S. F. Newcombe (in Michael Wilson's original script, the character was named Colonel Newcombe, before Robert Bolt changed it). Newcombe, like Brighton in the film, was Lawrence's predecessor as liaison to the Arab Revolt; he and many of his men were captured by the Turks in 1916 but he escaped. Brighton was created to represent how ordinary British soldiers would feel about a man like Lawrence: impressed by his accomplishments but repulsed by his affected manner.
  • Claude Rains as Mr. Dryden. Like Sherif Ali and Colonel Brighton, Dryden was an amalgamation of several historical figures, primarily Ronald Storrs, a member of the Arab Bureau but also David Hogarth, an archaeologist friend of Lawrence; Henry McMahon, the High Commissioner of Egypt who negotiated the McMahon-Hussein Correspondence which began the Arab Revolt and Mark Sykes, who helped draw up the Sykes–Picot Agreement which partitioned the post-war Middle East. Robert Bolt stated that the character was created to "represent the civilian and political wing of British interests, to balance Allenby's military objectives".[12]
  • Arthur Kennedy as Jackson Bentley. In the early days of the production, when the Bentley character had a more prominent role in the film, Kirk Douglas was considered for the part; Douglas expressed interest but demanded a star salary and the highest billing after O'Toole and thus was turned down by Spiegel. Later, Edmond O'Brien was cast in the part.[13] O'Brien filmed the Jerusalem scene and (according to Omar Sharif) Bentley's political discussion with Ali but he suffered a heart attack on location and had to be replaced at the last moment by Kennedy, who was recommended to Lean by Anthony Quinn.[14] The character was based on famed American journalist Lowell Thomas, whose reports helped make Lawrence famous. Thomas was a young man at the time who spent only weeks at most with Lawrence in the field, unlike Bentley, who is a middle-aged man present for all of Lawrence's later campaigns. Bentley was the narrator in Wilson's original script but Bolt reduced his role significantly in the final treatment.
  • Donald Wolfit as General Archibald Murray. He releases Lawrence to Mr. Dryden. Calls the British occupying Arabia "a sideshow of a sideshow."
  • I. S. Johar as Gasim. Johar was a well-known Indian actor who occasionally appeared in international productions.
  • Gamil Ratib as Majid. Ratib was a veteran Egyptian actor. His English was not considered good enough, so he was dubbed by Robert Rietti (uncredited)[citation needed] in the final edit.
  • Michel Ray as Farraj. At the time, Ray was a rising Anglo-Brazilian actor who had appeared in several films, including Irving Rapper's The Brave One (1956) and Anthony Mann's The Tin Star (1957).
  • John Dimech as Daud
  • Zia Mohyeddin as Tafas. Mohyeddin, one of Pakistan's best-known actors, played a character based on his actual guide Sheikh Obeid el-Rashid of the Hazimi branch of the Beni Salem, whom Lawrence referred to as Tafas several times in Seven Pillars.
  • Howard Marion-Crawford as the medical officer. He was cast at the last minute during the filming of the Damascus scenes in Seville. The character was based on an officer mentioned in an incident in Seven Pillars of Wisdom. Lawrence's meeting the officer again while in British uniform was an invention of the script.
  • Jack Gwillim as the club secretary. Gwillim was recommended to Lean for the film by close friend Quayle.
  • Hugh Miller as the RAMC colonel. He worked on several of Lean's films as a dialogue coach and was one of several members of the film crew to be given bit parts (see below).
  • Peter Burton as a Damascus sheik (uncredited)
  • Kenneth Fortescue as Allenby's aide (uncredited)[15]
  • Harry Fowler as Corporal William Potter (uncredited)[16]
  • Jack Hedley as a reporter (uncredited)
  • Ian MacNaughton as Corporal Michael George Hartley, Lawrence's companion in O'Toole's first scene (uncredited)
  • Henry Oscar as Silliam, Faisal's servant (uncredited)
  • Norman Rossington as Corporal Jenkins (uncredited)[15]
  • John Ruddock as Elder Harith (uncredited)[15]
  • Fernando Sancho as the Turkish sergeant (uncredited)
  • Stuart Saunders as the regimental sergeant major (uncredited)
  • Bryan Pringle as the driver of the car which takes Lawrence away at the end of the film (uncredited)

The crew consisted of over 200 people. Including cast and extras, over 1,000 people worked on the film.[17] Members of the crew portrayed minor characters. First assistant director Roy Stevens played the truck driver who transports Lawrence and Farraj to the Cairo HQ at the end of Act I; the Sergeant who stops Lawrence and Farraj ("Where do you think you're going to, Mustapha?") is construction assistant Fred Bennett and screenwriter Robert Bolt has a wordless cameo as one of the officers watching Allenby and Lawrence confer in the courtyard (he is smoking a pipe).[18] Steve Birtles, the film's gaffer, plays the motorcyclist at the Suez Canal; Lean is rumoured to be the voice shouting "Who are you?" Continuity supervisor Barbara Cole appears as one of the nurses in the Damascus hospital scene.[citation needed]

Historical accuracy

Most of the film's characters are based on people to varying degrees. Some scenes were heavily fictionalised, such as the Battle of Aqaba, and those dealing with the Arab Council were inaccurate since the council remained more or less in power in Syria until France deposed Faisal in 1920. Little background is provided on the history of the region, the First World War and the Arab Revolt, probably because of Bolt's increased focus on Lawrence (Wilson's draft script had a broader, more politicised version of events). The second half of the film presents a fictional desertion of Lawrence's Arab army, almost to a man, as he moved farther north. The film's timeline is frequently questionable on the Arab Revolt and First World War, as well as the geography of the Hejaz region. Bentley's meeting with Faisal in which he mentions that the United States has not yet entered the war is in late 1917 after the fall of Aqaba. Lawrence's involvement in the Arab Revolt prior to the attack on Aqaba is absent, as are his involvement in the seizures of Yenbo and Wejh. The rescue and the execution of Gasim are based on two incidents that were conflated for dramatic reasons.

The film shows Lawrence representing the Allied cause in the Hejaz almost alone, with Colonel Brighton (Anthony Quayle) the only British officer there to assist him. In fact, there were numerous British officers such as colonels Cyril Wilson, Stewart Newcombe, and Pierce C. Joyce, all of whom arrived before Lawrence began serving in Arabia.[19] There was a French military mission led by Colonel Édouard Brémond serving in the Hejaz but it is not mentioned in the film.[20] The film shows Lawrence as the originator of the attacks on the Hejaz railway. The first attacks began in early January 1917 led by officers such as Newcombe.[21] The first successful attack on the Hejaz railway with a locomotive-destroying "Garland mine" was led by Major Herbert Garland in February 1917, a month before Lawrence's first attack.[22]

The film shows the Hashemite forces consisting of Bedouin guerrillas, but the core of the Hashemite force was the regular Arab Army recruited from Ottoman Arab prisoners of war. They wore British-style uniforms with keffiyehs and fought in conventional battles.[23] The film makes no mention of the Sharifian Army and leaves the viewer with the impression that the Hashemite forces were composed exclusively of Bedouin irregulars.

Representation of Lawrence

 
Peter O'Toole as T. E. Lawrence

Many complaints about the film's accuracy concern the characterisation of Lawrence. The perceived problems with the portrayal begin with the differences in his physical appearance — the 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) Peter O'Toole was almost 9 in (230 mm) taller than the 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m) Lawrence[24] — and extended to his behaviour:

The screenwriters depict Lawrence as an egotist. It is not clear to what degree Lawrence sought or shunned attention, as evidenced by his use of various assumed names after the war. Even during the war, Lowell Thomas wrote in With Lawrence in Arabia that he could take pictures of him only by tricking him, although Lawrence later agreed to pose for several photos for Thomas's stage show. Thomas's famous comment that Lawrence "had a genius for backing into the limelight" suggests that his extraordinary actions prevented him from being as private as he would have liked, or may suggest that Lawrence made a pretence of avoiding the limelight but subtly placed himself at centre stage. Others point to Lawrence's writings to support the argument that he was egotistical.

Lawrence's sexual orientation remains a controversial topic among historians. Bolt's primary source was ostensibly Seven Pillars, but the film's portrayal seems informed by Richard Aldington's Biographical Inquiry (1955), which posited Lawrence as a "pathological liar and exhibitionist" as well as a homosexual. That is opposed to his portrayal in Ross as "physically and spiritually recluse".[25] Historians like B. H. Liddell Hart disputed the film's depiction of Lawrence as an active participant in the attack and slaughter of the retreating Turkish columns who had committed the Tafas massacre, but most current biographers accept the film's portrayal as reasonably accurate.

The film shows that Lawrence spoke and read Arabic and could quote the Quran and was reasonably knowledgeable about the region. It barely mentions his archaeological travels from 1911 to 1914 in Syria and Arabia and ignores his espionage work, including a pre-war topographical survey of the Sinai Peninsula and his attempts to negotiate the release of British prisoners at Kut, Mesopotamia, in 1916. Lawrence is made aware of the Sykes–Picot Agreement very late in the story and is shown to be appalled by it, but he may well have known about it much earlier while he fought with the Arabs.[26]

Lawrence's biographers have a mixed reaction towards the film. The authorised biographer Jeremy Wilson noted that the film has "undoubtedly influenced the perceptions of some subsequent biographers", such as the depiction of the film's Ali being a real rather than a composite character and the highlighting of the Deraa incident.[27] The film's historical inaccuracies, in Wilson's view, are more questionable than should be allowed under normal dramatic licence. Liddell Hart criticised the film and engaged Bolt in a lengthy correspondence over its portrayal of Lawrence.[28]

Representation of other characters

The film portrays Allenby as cynical and manipulative with a superior attitude to Lawrence, but there is much evidence that Allenby and Lawrence liked and respected each other. Lawrence once said that Allenby was "an admiration of mine" and later that he was "physically large and confident and morally so great that the comprehension of our littleness came slow to him".[29][30] The fictional Allenby's words at Lawrence's funeral in the film stand in contrast to the real Allenby's remarks upon Lawrence's death,

I have lost a good friend and a valued comrade. Lawrence was under my command, but, after acquainting him with my strategical plan, I gave him a free hand. His co-operation was marked by the utmost loyalty, and I never had anything but praise for his work, which, indeed, was invaluable throughout the campaign."[31]

Allenby also spoke highly of him numerous times and much to Lawrence's delight publicly endorsed the accuracy of Seven Pillars of Wisdom. Although Allenby manipulated Lawrence during the war, their relationship lasted for years after its end, likely indicating that in real life they were friendly, if not close. The Allenby family was particularly upset by the Damascus scenes in which Allenby coldly allows the town to fall into chaos as the Arab Council collapses.[32]

Murray was initially sceptical of the Arab Revolt's potential but thought highly of Lawrence's abilities as an intelligence officer. It was largely through Lawrence's persuasion that Murray came to support the revolt. The intense dislike shown toward Lawrence in the film is the opposite of Murray's real feelings, but Lawrence seemed not to hold Murray in any high regard.

The depiction of Auda abu Tayi as a man interested only in loot and money is also at odds with the historical record. Although Auda at first joined the revolt for monetary reasons, he quickly became a steadfast supporter of Arab independence, notably after Aqaba's capture. Despite repeated bribery attempts by the Turks, he happily pocketed their money but remained loyal to the revolt and went so far as to knock out his false teeth, which were Turkish-made. He was present with Lawrence from the beginning of the Aqaba expedition and in fact helped to plan it, along with Lawrence and Prince Faisal. Faisal was far from being the middle-aged man depicted since he was in his early thirties at the time of the revolt. Faisal and Lawrence respected each other's capabilities and intelligence and worked well together.[33]

The reactions of those who knew Lawrence and the other characters cast doubt on the film's veracity. The most vehement critic of its accuracy was Professor A. W. Lawrence, T. E. Lawrence's younger brother and literary executor who had sold the rights to Seven Pillars of Wisdom to Spiegel for £25,000 and went on a campaign in the United States and Britain to denounce the film. He famously said, "I should not have recognised my own brother". In one pointed talk show appearance, he remarked that he had found the film "pretentious and false" and went on to say that his brother was "one of the nicest, kindest and most exhilarating people I've known. He often appeared cheerful when he was unhappy". Later, he said to The New York Times, "[The film is] a psychological recipe. Take an ounce of narcissism, a pound of exhibitionism, a pint of sadism, a gallon of blood-lust and a sprinkle of other aberrations and stir well." Lowell Thomas was also critical of the portrayal of Lawrence and of most of the film's characters and believed that the train attack scenes were the only reasonably accurate aspect of the film. Criticisms were not restricted to Lawrence. Allenby's family lodged a formal complaint against Columbia about his portrayal. Descendants of Auda abu Tayi and Sharif Nassir (upon whom the film's Ali was partially based) went further by suing Columbia. The Auda case went on for almost 10 years before it was dropped.[34]

The film has its defenders. Biographer Michael Korda, the author of Hero: The Life and Legend of Lawrence of Arabia, offers a different opinion. The film is neither "the full story of Lawrence's life or a completely accurate account of the two years he spent fighting with the Arabs". Korda said that criticising its inaccuracy "misses the point". "The object was to produce, not a faithful docudrama that would educate the audience, but a hit picture".[35] Stephen E. Tabachnick goes further than Korda by arguing that the film's portrayal of Lawrence is "appropriate and true to the text of Seven Pillars of Wisdom".[36] David Murphy, historian and author of the 2008 book The Arab Revolt, wrote that although the film was flawed with various inaccuracies and omissions, "it was a truly epic movie and is rightly seen as a classic".[37]

Production

Pre-production

Previous films about T. E. Lawrence had been planned but had not been made. In the 1940s, Alexander Korda was interested in filming The Seven Pillars of Wisdom with Laurence Olivier, Leslie Howard, or Robert Donat as Lawrence, but had to pull out owing to financial difficulties. David Lean had been approached to direct a 1952 version for the Rank Organisation, but the project fell through.[38] At the same time as pre-production of the film, Terence Rattigan was developing his play Ross which centred primarily on Lawrence's alleged homosexuality. Ross had begun as a screenplay, but was re-written for the stage when the film project fell through. Sam Spiegel grew furious and attempted to have the play suppressed, which helped to gain publicity for the film.[39] Dirk Bogarde had accepted the role in Ross; he described the cancellation of the project as "my bitterest disappointment". Alec Guinness played the role on stage.[40]

Lean and Sam Spiegel had worked together on The Bridge on the River Kwai and decided to collaborate again. For a time, Lean was interested in a biopic of Gandhi, with Alec Guinness to play the title role and Emeric Pressburger writing the screenplay. He eventually lost interest in the project, despite extensive pre-production work, including location scouting in India and a meeting with Jawaharlal Nehru.[41] Lean then returned his attention to T. E. Lawrence. Columbia Pictures had an interest in a Lawrence project dating back to the early '50s, and the project got underway when Spiegel convinced a reluctant A. W. Lawrence to sell the rights to Seven Pillars of Wisdom for £22,500.[42]

Michael Wilson wrote the original draft of the screenplay. Lean was dissatisfied with Wilson's work, primarily because his treatment focused on the historical and political aspects of the Arab Revolt. Lean hired Robert Bolt to re-write the script to make it a character study of Lawrence. Many of the characters and scenes are Wilson's invention, but virtually all of the dialogue in the finished film was written by Bolt.[43]

Lean reportedly watched John Ford's 1956 film The Searchers to help him develop ideas as to how to shoot the film. Several scenes directly recall Ford's film, most notably Ali's entrance at the well and the composition of many of the desert scenes and the dramatic exit from Wadi Rum. Lean biographer Kevin Brownlow noted a physical similarity between Wadi Rum and Ford's Monument Valley.[44]

In an interview with The Washington Post in 1989, Lean said that Lawrence and Ali were written as being in a gay relationship. When asked about whether the film was "pervasively homoerotic", Lean responded:

Yes. Of course it is. Throughout. I'll never forget standing there in the desert once, with some of these tough Arab buggers, some of the toughest we had, and I suddenly thought, "He's making eyes at me!" And he was! So it does pervade it, the whole story, and certainly Lawrence was very if not entirely homosexual. We thought we were being very daring at the time: Lawrence and Omar, Lawrence and the Arab boys.[45]

Lean also compared Ali and Lawrence's romance in the film to the relationship of the two main characters in his 1945 film Brief Encounter.[46]

Filming

The film was made by Horizon Pictures and distributed by Columbia Pictures. Principal photography began on 15 May 1961 and ended on 21 September 1962.[47] The desert scenes were shot in Jordan and Morocco and Almería and Doñana in Spain. It was originally to be filmed entirely in Jordan; the government of King Hussein was extremely helpful in providing logistical assistance, location scouting, transport and extras. Hussein visited the set several times during production and maintained cordial relationships with cast and crew. The only tension occurred when Jordanian officials learned that English actor Henry Oscar did not speak Arabic but would be filmed reciting the Quran. Permission was granted only on condition that an imam be present to ensure that there were no misquotations.

 
The Mudéjar pavilion of the Parque de María Luisa in Seville appeared as Damascus.
 
The Plaza de España, Seville appeared as Britain's Egyptian Expeditionary Force Headquarters in Cairo, which included the officers' club.

Lean planned to film in Aqaba and the archaeological site at Petra, which Lawrence had been fond of as a place of study. The production had to be moved to Spain due to cost and outbreaks of illness among the cast and crew before these scenes could be shot. The attack on Aqaba was reconstructed in a dried river bed in Playa del Algarrobico, southern Spain (at 37°1′25″N 1°52′53″W / 37.02361°N 1.88139°W / 37.02361; -1.88139); it consisted of more than 300 buildings and was meticulously based on the town's appearance in 1917. The execution of Gasim, the train attacks, and Deraa exteriors were filmed in the Almería region, with some of the filming being delayed because of a flash flood. The Sierra Nevada mountains filled in for Azrak, Lawrence's winter quarters. The city of Seville was used to represent Cairo, Jerusalem and Damascus, with the appearance of Casa de Pilatos, the Alcázar of Seville and the Plaza de España. All of the interiors were shot in Spain, including Lawrence's first meeting with Faisal and the scene in Auda's tent. The Tafas massacre was filmed in Ouarzazate, Morocco, with Moroccan soldiers substituting for the Turkish army; Lean could not film as much as he wanted because the soldiers were uncooperative and impatient.[48]

The film's production was frequently delayed because shooting commenced without a finished script. Wilson quit early in the production and the playwright Beverley Cross worked on the script in the interim before Bolt took over, although none of Cross's material made it to the film. When Bolt was arrested for taking part in an anti-nuclear weapons demonstration, Spiegel had to persuade him to sign a recognizance of good behaviour to be released from jail and continue working on the script.

O'Toole was not used to riding camels and found the saddle to be uncomfortable. During a break in filming, he bought a piece of foam rubber at a market and added it to his saddle. Many of the extras copied the idea and sheets of the foam can be seen on many of the horse and camel saddles. The Bedouin nicknamed O'Toole "'Ab al-'Isfanjah" (أب الإسفنجة), meaning "Father of the Sponge".[49] During the filming of the Aqaba scene, O'Toole was nearly killed when he fell from his camel, but it stood over him, preventing the extras' horses from trampling him. Coincidentally, a very similar mishap befell the real Lawrence at the Battle of Abu El Lissal in 1917.[citation needed]

Super Panavision technology was used to shoot the film, meaning that spherical lenses were used instead of anamorphic ones, and the image was exposed on a 65 mm negative, then printed onto a 70 mm positive to leave room for the soundtracks. Rapid cutting was more disturbing on the wide screen, so film makers had to apply longer and more fluid takes. Shooting such a wide ratio produced some unwanted effects during projection, such as a peculiar "flutter" effect, a blurring of certain parts of the image. To avoid the problem, the director often had to modify blocking, giving the actor a more diagonal movement, where the flutter was less likely to occur.[50] Lean was asked whether he could handle CinemaScope: "If one had an eye for composition, there would be no problem."[51] O'Toole did not share Lawrence's love of the desert and stated in an interview "I loathe it".[52]

Music

The film score was composed by Maurice Jarre, little known at the time and selected only after both William Walton and Malcolm Arnold had proved unavailable. Jarre was given just six weeks to compose two hours of orchestral music for Lawrence.[53] The score was performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra. Sir Adrian Boult is listed as the conductor of the score in the film's credits, but he could not conduct most of the score, due in part to his failure to adapt to the intricate timings of each cue, and Jarre replaced him as the conductor. The score went on to garner Jarre his first Academy Award for Music Score—Substantially Original[54] and is now considered one of the greatest scores of all time, ranking number three on the American Film Institute's top twenty-five film scores.[55]

Producer Sam Spiegel wanted to create a score with two themes to show the 'Eastern' and British side for the film. It was intended for Soviet composer Aram Khachaturian to create one half and British composer Benjamin Britten to write the other.[56]

The original soundtrack recording was originally released on Colpix Records, the records division of Columbia Pictures, in 1962. A remastered edition appeared on Castle Music, a division of the Sanctuary Records Group, on 28 August 2006.

Kenneth Alford's march The Voice of the Guns (1917) is prominently featured on the soundtrack. One of Alford's other pieces, the Colonel Bogey March, was the musical theme for Lean's previous film The Bridge on the River Kwai.

A complete recording of the score was not heard until 2010 when Tadlow Music produced a CD of the music, with Nic Raine conducting the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra from scores reconstructed by Leigh Phillips.

Release

Theatrical run

The film premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square in London on 10 December 1962 and was released in the United States on 16 December 1962.

Jordan banned the film for what was felt to be a disrespectful portrayal of Arab culture.[8] Egypt, Omar Sharif's home country, was the only Arab nation to give the film a wide release, where it became a success through the endorsement of President Gamal Abdel Nasser, who appreciated the film's depiction of Arab nationalism.

 
Theatrical poster from 1962 during its release

The original release ran for about 222 minutes (plus overture, intermission, and exit music). A post-premiere memo (13 December 1962) noted that the film was 24,987.5 feet (7,616.2 m) of 70 mm film, or 19,990 feet (6,090 m) of 35 mm film. With 90 feet (27 m) of 35 mm film projected every minute, this corresponds to exactly 222.11 minutes. Richard May, vice president of Film Preservation at Warner Bros., sent an email to Robert Morris, co-author of a book on Lawrence of Arabia, in which he noted that Gone With the Wind (1939) was never edited after its premiere and is 19,884 feet (6,061 m) of 35 mm film (without leaders, overture, intermission, entr'acte, or walkout music), corresponding to 220.93 min.[citation needed] Thus, Lawrence of Arabia is slightly more than one minute longer than Gone With the Wind and is, therefore, the longest movie ever to win a Best Picture Oscar.[citation needed]

In January 1963, Lawrence of Arabia was released in a version edited by 20 minutes.[57] In the United States, the film was released in five key cities—New York, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Miami Beach. By February 1963, the film expanded into six more reserved-seating engagements.[58]

When it was re-released in 1971, an even shorter cut of 187 minutes was presented.[57] The first round of cuts was made at the direction and even insistence of David Lean, to assuage criticisms of the film's length and increase the number of showings per day; however, during the 1989 restoration, he passed blame for the cuts onto deceased producer Sam Spiegel.[59][60] In addition, a 1966 print was used for initial television and video releases which accidentally altered a few scenes by reversing the image.[61]

The film was screened out of competition at the 1989 Cannes Film Festival[62] and at the 2012 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival.[63]

Lawrence of Arabia was re-released theatrically in 2002 to celebrate the film's fortieth anniversary.[64]

Restored director's cut

A restored version was undertaken by Robert A. Harris and Jim Painten under the supervision of David Lean. It was released in 1989 with a 216-minute length (plus overture, intermission and exit music). Most of the cut scenes were dialogue sequences, particularly those involving General Allenby and his staff. Two scenes were excised—Brighton's briefing of Allenby in Jerusalem before the Deraa scene and the British staff meeting in the field tent—and the Allenby-briefing scene has still not been entirely restored. Much of the missing dialogue involves Lawrence's writing of poetry and verse, alluded to by Allenby in particular, saying "the last poetry general we had was Wellington". The opening of Act II existed in only fragmented form, where Faisal is interviewed by Bentley, as well as the later scene in Jerusalem where Allenby convinces Lawrence not to resign. Both scenes were restored to the 1989 re-release. Some of the more graphic shots of the Tafas massacre scene were also restored, such as the lengthy panning shot of the corpses in Tafas and Lawrence shooting a surrendering Turkish soldier.

Most of the missing footage is of minimal import, supplementing existing scenes. One scene is an extended version of the Deraa torture sequence, which makes Lawrence's punishment more overt. Other scripted scenes exist, including a conversation between Auda and Lawrence immediately after the fall of Aqaba, a brief scene of Turkish officers noting the extent of Lawrence's campaign and the battle of Petra (later reworked into the first train attack) but these scenes were probably not filmed. Living actors dubbed their dialogue and Jack Hawkins's dialogue was dubbed by Charles Gray, who had provided Hawkins' voice for several films after Hawkins developed throat cancer in the late 1960s.[65] A full list of cuts can be found at the IMDb.[66] Reasons for the cuts of various scenes can be found in Lean's notes to Sam Spiegel, Robert Bolt and Anne V. Coates.[67] The film runs 227 minutes in the most recent director's cut available on Blu-ray Disc and DVD.[2]

Home media

Lawrence of Arabia has been released in five different DVD editions, including an initial release as a two-disc set (2001),[68] followed by a shorter single disc edition (2002),[69] a high resolution version of the director's cut with restored scenes (2003) issued as part of the Superbit series, as part of the Columbia Best Pictures collection (2008), and in a fully restored special edition of the director's cut (2008).[70]

Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg helped restore a version of the film for a DVD release in 2000.[71]

New restoration, Blu-ray, and theatrical re-release

An 8K scan/4K intermediate digital restoration was made for Blu-ray and theatrical re-release[72] during 2012 by Sony Pictures to celebrate the film's 50th anniversary.[73] The Blu-ray edition of the film was released in the United Kingdom on 10 September 2012 and in the United States on 13 November 2012.[74] The film received a one-day theatrical release on 4 October 2012 and a two-day release in Canada on 11 and 15 November 2012, and it was re-released in the United Kingdom on 23 November 2012.

According to Grover Crisp, executive VP of restoration at Sony Pictures, the new 8K scan has such high resolution that it showed a series of fine concentric lines in a pattern "reminiscent of a fingerprint" near the top of the frame. This was caused by the film emulsion melting and cracking in the desert heat during production. Sony had to hire a third party to minimise or eliminate the rippling artefacts in the new restored version.[72] The digital restoration was done by Sony Colorworks DI, Prasad Studios, and MTI Film.[75]

A 4K digitally restored version of the film was screened at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival,[76][77] at the 2012 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival,[63] at the V Janela Internacional de Cinema[78] in Recife, Brazil, and at the 2013 Cinequest Film & Creativity Festival in San Jose, California.[79]

In 2020, Sony Pictures reissued the film on a multi-film 4K UHD Blu-Ray release called the Columbia Classics 4K UltraHD Collection, which included other historically significant films from their library such as Dr. Strangelove (1964) and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939).[80] In honor of the film's 60th anniversary, the film was re-released in an individual two-disc steelbook set by Kino Lorber, with both including a substantial, mostly overlapping collection of special features.[81]

Reception

Box office

During its initial theatrical run, the film earned $15 million in box office rentals in the United States and Canada.[82]

Critical reaction

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times called the film "vast, awe-inspiring, beautiful with ever-changing hues, exhausting and barren of humanity." He further wrote Lawrence's characterization was lost within the spectacle, writing the film "reduces a legendary figure to conventional movie-hero size amidst magnificent and exotic scenery but a conventional lot of action-film cliches."[83] Similarly, Variety wrote the film was "a sweepingly produced, directed and lensed job. Authentic desert locations, a stellar cast and an intriguing subject combine to put this into the blockbuster league." However, it later noted Bolt's screenplay "does not tell the audience anything much new about Lawrence of Arabia nor does it offer any opinion or theory about the character of this man or the motivation for his actions."[84] Philip K. Scheuer of the Los Angeles Times wrote: "It is also one of the most magnificent pictures, if not the magnificent, and one of the most exasperating ... The awesome majesty of the landscapes in Jordan and elsewhere, the mass movements of Bedouins and British and Turks with, of course, the ever-present camels, sweep against the eye long after one has lost the ability to exclaim in astonishment over them. And all this is Technicolor and Super Panavision 70, the finest process, under F. A. Young as director of photography. Maurice Jarre composed a score to match."[85]

Time magazine felt that while Lawrence of Arabia "falls far short of Kwai in dramatic impact, it nevertheless presents a vivid and intelligent spectacle." It further praised O'Toole's performance, writing he "continually dominates the screen, and he dominates it with professional skill, Irish charm and smashing good looks."[86] The Chicago Tribune wrote the photography was "no less than superb" and felt the script "is taut and expressive and the musical score deftly attuned to the tale. Director David Lean has molded his massive material with skill, but personally I felt the film was too long, the running time is 221 minutes, or 20 minutes short of 4 hours and in the latter part, unnecessarily bloody."[87] A review in Newsweek praised the film as "an admirably seriously film ... The size, the scope, the fantastical scale of his personality and his achievement is triumphantly there." It also praised the ensemble cast as "all as good as they ought to be. And Peter O'Toole is not only good; he is an unnerving look-alike of the real Lawrence. He is reliably unreliable, steadily mercurial."[88]

In 1998, the American Film Institute ranked Lawrence of Arabia in fifth place in their list of 100 Years...100 Movies. In 2007, it was ranked in seventh place in its updated list and listed as the first of the greatest American films of the "epic" genre.[89] In 1991, the film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.[6] In 1999, the film placed third in the British Film Institute's poll of the best British films of the 20th century and in 2001 the magazine Total Film called it "as shockingly beautiful and hugely intelligent as any film ever made" and "faultless".[90] It was ranked in the top ten films of all time in the 2002 Sight & Sound directors' poll.[91] In 2004, it was voted the best British film of all time by over 200 respondents in The Sunday Telegraph poll of Britain's leading film makers.[92] O'Toole's performance is often considered one of the greatest in all of cinema, topping lists from Entertainment Weekly and Premiere. T. E. Lawrence, portrayed by O'Toole, was selected as the tenth-greatest hero in cinema history by the American Film Institute.[93] In 2012, the Motion Picture Editors Guild listed the film as the seventh best-edited film of all time based on a survey of its membership.[94]

Lawrence of Arabia is currently one of the highest-rated films on Metacritic; it holds a perfect 100 rating, indicating "universal acclaim", based on eight reviews.[95] It has a 94% "Certified Fresh" approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 132 reviews, with an average rating of 9.30/10. Its critical consensus reads: "The epic of all epics, Lawrence of Arabia cements director David Lean's status in the film-making pantheon with nearly four hours of grand scope, brilliant performances, and beautiful cinematography."[96]

The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited this movie as one of his 100 favourite films.[97]

Awards and honours

Award Category Nominee(s) Result
Academy Awards[98] Best Picture Sam Spiegel Won
Best Director David Lean Won
Best Actor Peter O'Toole Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Omar Sharif Nominated
Best Screenplay – Based on Material from Another Medium Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson Nominated
Best Art Direction – Color John Box, John Stoll and Dario Simoni Won
Best Cinematography – Color Freddie Young Won
Best Film Editing Anne V. Coates Won
Best Music Score – Substantially Original Maurice Jarre Won
Best Sound John Cox Won
American Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Anne V. Coates Nominated
British Academy Film Awards[99] Best Film from any Source Won
Best British Film Won
Best British Actor Peter O'Toole Won
Best Foreign Actor Anthony Quinn Nominated
Best British Screenplay Robert Bolt Won
British Society of Cinematographers[100] Best Cinematography Freddie Young Won
David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Production Sam Spiegel Won
Best Foreign Actor Peter O'Toole Won[a]
Directors Guild of America Awards[101] Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures David Lean Won
Golden Globe Awards[102] Best Motion Picture – Drama Won
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Peter O'Toole Nominated
Anthony Quinn Nominated
Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Omar Sharif Won
Best Director – Motion Picture David Lean Won
Most Promising Newcomer – Male Peter O'Toole Won
Omar Sharif Won
Best Cinematography – Color Freddie Young Won
Grammy Awards[103] Best Original Score from a Motion Picture or Television Show Maurice Jarre Nominated
International Film Music Critics Association Awards[104] Best Archival Release of an Existing Score Maurice Jarre, Nic Raine, Jim Fitzpatrick and Frank K. DeWald Nominated
Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film David Lean Won
Laurel Awards Top Road Show Won
Top Male Dramatic Performance Peter O'Toole Nominated
Top Male Supporting Performance Omar Sharif Nominated
Top Song Maurice Jarre (for the "Theme Song") Nominated
Nastro d'Argento Best Foreign Director David Lean Won
National Board of Review Awards[105] Top Ten Films 4th Place
Best Director David Lean Won
National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry Inducted
Online Film & Television Association Awards[106] Hall of Fame – Motion Picture Won
Producers Guild of America Awards PGA Hall of Fame – Motion Pictures Sam Spiegel Won
Saturn Awards Best DVD or Blu-ray Special Edition Release Lawrence of Arabia: 50th Anniversary Collector's Edition Nominated
Writers' Guild of Great Britain Awards Best British Dramatic Screenplay Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson Won

Legacy

Its visual style has influenced many directors, including George Lucas, Sam Peckinpah, Stanley Kubrick, Martin Scorsese, Ridley Scott, Brian De Palma, Oliver Stone and Steven Spielberg, who called the film a "miracle".[107] Spielberg further considered it his favourite film of all time and the one that inspired him to become a filmmaker,[108] crediting the film, which he saw four times in four successive weeks upon its release, with understanding "It was the first time seeing a movie, I realized there are themes that aren't narrative story themes, there are themes that are character themes, that are personal themes. [...] and I realized there was no going back. It was what I was going to do."[109]

Film director Kathryn Bigelow also considers it one of her favourite films, saying it inspired her to film The Hurt Locker in Jordan.[110] Lawrence of Arabia also inspired numerous other adventure, science fiction and fantasy stories in modern popular culture, including Frank Herbert's Dune franchise, George Lucas's Star Wars franchise, James Cameron's Avatar franchise, Ridley Scott's Prometheus (2012), George Miller's Mad Max: Fury Road (2015),[111] and Disney's Frozen franchise.[112]

Later film

In 1990, the made-for-television film A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia was aired. It depicts events in the lives of Lawrence and Faisal subsequent to Lawrence of Arabia and featured Ralph Fiennes as Lawrence and Alexander Siddig as Prince Faisal.

See also

Notes

References

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  2. ^ a b "Lawrence of Arabia". British Board of Film Classification. from the original on 8 October 2020. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  3. ^ "Lawrence of Arabia (1962)". BFI. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
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  5. ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. from the original on 8 October 2020. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  6. ^ a b Andrews, Robert M. (26 September 1991). "25 Classics Join U.S. Film Registry". Los Angeles Times. from the original on 15 September 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
  7. ^ Turner 1994, pp. 41–45
  8. ^ a b Woolf, Christopher (16 December 2013). "Is Peter O'Toole's Lawrence of Arabia fact or fiction?". PRI. from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
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  10. ^ Turner 1994, pp. 45–49
  11. ^ Turner 1994, p. 49
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  13. ^ Turner 1994, p. 51
  14. ^ Turner 1994, pp. 137–38
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Sources

Further reading

External links

lawrence, arabia, film, lawrence, arabia, 1962, british, epic, historical, drama, film, based, life, lawrence, 1926, book, seven, pillars, wisdom, directed, david, lean, produced, spiegel, through, british, company, horizon, pictures, distributed, columbia, pi. Lawrence of Arabia is a 1962 British epic historical drama film based on the life of T E Lawrence and his 1926 book Seven Pillars of Wisdom It was directed by David Lean and produced by Sam Spiegel through his British company Horizon Pictures and distributed by Columbia Pictures The film stars Peter O Toole as Lawrence with Alec Guinness playing Prince Faisal The film also stars Jack Hawkins Anthony Quinn Omar Sharif Anthony Quayle Claude Rains and Arthur Kennedy The screenplay was written by Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson Lawrence of ArabiaTheatrical release poster by Howard TerpningDirected byDavid LeanScreenplay byRobert Bolt Michael WilsonBased onSeven Pillars of Wisdomby T E LawrenceProduced bySam SpiegelStarringAlec Guinness Anthony Quinn Jack Hawkins Jose Ferrer Anthony Quayle Claude Rains Arthur Kennedy Omar Sharif Peter O TooleCinematographyFreddie A YoungEdited byAnne V CoatesMusic byMaurice JarreProductioncompanyHorizon Pictures 1 Distributed byColumbia Pictures 1 Release date10 December 1962 1962 12 10 Running time210 minutes 2 CountryUnited Kingdom 3 LanguageEnglishBudget 15 million 4 Box office 70 million 4 The film depicts Lawrence s experiences in the Ottoman provinces of Hejaz and Greater Syria during the First World War in particular his attacks on Aqaba and Damascus and his involvement in the Arab National Council Its themes include Lawrence s emotional struggles with the violence inherent in war his identity and his divided allegiance between his native Britain with its army and his new found comrades within the Arabian desert tribes The film was nominated for ten Oscars at the 35th Academy Awards in 1963 winning seven including Best Picture and Best Director It also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Drama and the BAFTA Awards for Best Film and Outstanding British Film The dramatic score by Maurice Jarre and the Super Panavision 70 cinematography by Freddie Young also won praise from critics Lawrence of Arabia is widely regarded as one of the greatest films ever made In 1991 it was deemed culturally historically or aesthetically significant by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry 5 6 In 1998 the American Film Institute placed it fifth on their 100 Years 100 Movies list of the greatest American films and it ranked seventh on their 2007 updated list In 1999 the British Film Institute named the film the third greatest British film In 2004 it was voted the best British film in a Sunday Telegraph poll of Britain s leading filmmakers Contents 1 Plot 1 1 Part I 1 2 Part II 2 Cast 3 Historical accuracy 3 1 Representation of Lawrence 3 2 Representation of other characters 4 Production 4 1 Pre production 4 2 Filming 4 3 Music 5 Release 5 1 Theatrical run 5 2 Restored director s cut 5 3 Home media 5 4 New restoration Blu ray and theatrical re release 6 Reception 6 1 Box office 6 2 Critical reaction 6 3 Awards and honours 7 Legacy 8 Later film 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksPlot EditThe film is presented in two parts divided by an intermission Part I Edit In 1935 T E Lawrence dies in a motorcycle accident At his memorial service at St Paul s Cathedral a reporter tries with little success to gain insights into the remarkable enigmatic man from those who knew him During the First World War Lawrence is a misfit British Army lieutenant who is notable for his insolence and education Over the objections of General Murray Mr Dryden of the Arab Bureau sends him to assess the prospects of Prince Faisal in his revolt against the Turks On the journey his Bedouin guide Tafas is killed by Sherif Ali ibn el Kharish for drinking from his well without permission Lawrence later meets Colonel Brighton who orders him to keep quiet make his assessment and leave Lawrence ignores Brighton s orders when he meets Faisal his outspokenness piques the prince s interest Brighton advises Faisal to retreat after a major defeat but Lawrence proposes a daring surprise attack on Aqaba Its capture would provide a port from which the British could offload much needed supplies The town is strongly fortified against a naval assault but only lightly defended on the landward side He convinces Faisal to provide fifty men led by a pessimistic Sherif Ali The teenage orphans Daud and Farraj attach themselves to Lawrence as servants and Lawrence develops a fatherly affection for them They cross the Nefud Desert considered impassable even by the Bedouins and travel day and night on the last stage to reach water One of Ali s men Gasim succumbs to fatigue and falls off his camel unnoticed during the night When Lawrence discovers him missing he turns back and rescues Gasim Won over Ali burns Lawrence s uniform and gives him Arab robes to wear The men accept Lawrence as one of their own Lawrence persuades Auda Abu Tayi the leader of the powerful local Howeitat tribe to turn against the Turks Lawrence s scheme is almost derailed when one of Ali s men kills one of Auda s because of a blood feud Since retaliation by the Howeitat would shatter the fragile alliance Lawrence declares that he will execute the murderer himself Lawrence is then stunned to discover that the culprit is Gasim the man he risked his own life to save but shoots him anyway The next morning the Arabs overrun the Turkish garrison Lawrence heads to Cairo with Daud and Farraj to inform Dryden and the new commander General Allenby of his victory While crossing the Sinai Desert Daud dies when he stumbles into quicksand much to Lawrence and Farraj s grief Although his report of Aqaba s capture is initially disbelieved Lawrence is promoted to major and given arms and money for the Arabs He is deeply disturbed and confesses that he enjoyed executing Gasim but Allenby brushes aside his qualms Lawrence asks Allenby whether there is any basis for the Arabs suspicions that the British have designs on Arabia When pressed Allenby states that there is none Part II Edit Lawrence launches a guerrilla war by blowing up the Ottoman railway between Damascus and Medina and harassing the Turks at every turn An American war correspondent Jackson Bentley publicises Lawrence s exploits and makes him famous On one raid Farraj is badly injured Unwilling to leave him to be tortured by the enemy Lawrence reluctantly shoots him dead and then flees When Lawrence scouts the enemy held city of Deraa with Ali he is taken along with several Arab residents to the Turkish Bey Lawrence is stripped ogled and prodded Then for striking out at the Bey he is severely flogged before he is thrown into the street where Ali comes to his aid The experience leaves Lawrence shaken He returns to British headquarters in Cairo but does not fit in A short time later in Jerusalem General Allenby urges him to support the big push on Damascus Lawrence hesitates to return but finally relents Lawrence recruits an army that is motivated more by money than by the Arab cause They sight a column of retreating Turkish soldiers who have just massacred the residents of Tafas One of Lawrence s men is from Tafas and demands No prisoners When Lawrence hesitates the man charges the Turks alone and is killed Lawrence takes up the dead man s battle cry the result is a slaughter in which Lawrence himself participates despite Ali s protests He regrets his actions thereafter Lawrence s men take Damascus ahead of Allenby s forces The Arabs set up a council to administer the city but the British cut off access to the public utilities leaving the desert tribesmen to debate how to maintain the occupation Despite Lawrence s efforts they bicker constantly and soon abandon most of the city to the British Lawrence is promoted to colonel and immediately ordered back to Britain as his usefulness to both Faisal and the British is at an end As he leaves the city he looks longingly at the departing Arabs before his car is passed by a motorcyclist who leaves a trail of dust in his wake The chauffeur remarks that Lawrence is on his way home but Lawrence does not reply Cast EditPeter O Toole as T E Lawrence Albert Finney was a virtual unknown at the time but he was Lean s first choice to play Lawrence Finney was cast and began principal photography but was fired after two days for reasons that are still unclear Marlon Brando was also offered the part while Anthony Perkins and Montgomery Clift were briefly considered before O Toole was cast 7 Alec Guinness had played Lawrence in the play Ross and was briefly considered for the part but Lean and Spiegel thought him too old Lean had seen O Toole in The Day They Robbed the Bank of England 1960 and was bowled over by his screen test proclaiming This is Lawrence Spiegel disliked Clift having worked with him on Suddenly Last Summer 1959 Spiegel eventually acceded to Lean s choice Pictures of Lawrence suggest also that O Toole bore some resemblance to him though at 6 feet 2 inches 1 88 m tall O Toole was significantly taller than Lawrence 8 O Toole s looks prompted a different reaction from Noel Coward who quipped after seeing the premiere of the film If you had been any prettier the film would have been called Florence of Arabia 9 Alec Guinness as Prince Faisal Faisal was originally to be portrayed by Laurence Olivier Guinness performed in other David Lean films and he got the part when Olivier dropped out Guinness was made up to look as much like the real Faisal as possible he recorded in his diaries that while shooting in Jordan he met several people who had known Faisal who actually mistook him for the late prince Guinness said in interviews that he developed his Arab accent from a conversation that he had with Omar Sharif Anthony Quinn as Auda abu Tayi Quinn got very much into his role he spent hours applying his own makeup using a photograph of the real Auda to make himself look as much like him as he could One anecdote has Quinn arriving on set for the first time in full costume whereupon Lean mistook him for a native and asked his assistant to ring Quinn and notify him that they were replacing him with the new arrival Jack Hawkins as General Edmund Allenby Spiegel pushed Lean to cast Cary Grant or Laurence Olivier who was engaged at the Chichester Festival Theatre and declined Lean convinced him to choose Hawkins because of his work for them on The Bridge on the River Kwai 1957 Hawkins shaved his head for the role and reportedly clashed with Lean several times during filming Guinness recounted that Hawkins was reprimanded by Lean for celebrating the end of a day s filming with an impromptu dance Hawkins became close friends with O Toole during filming and the two often improvised dialogue during takes to Lean s dismay Omar Sharif as Sherif Ali ibn el Kharish The role was offered to many actors before Sharif was cast Horst Buchholz was the first choice but had already signed on for the film One Two Three Alain Delon had a successful screen test but ultimately declined because of the brown contact lenses he would have had to wear Maurice Ronet and Dilip Kumar were also considered 10 Sharif who was already a major star in the Middle East was originally cast as Lawrence s guide Tafas but when the other actors proved unsuitable Sharif was shifted to the part of Ali A combination of numerous Arab leaders particularly Sharif Nassir Faisal s cousin who led the Harith forces involved in the attack on Aqaba this character was created largely because Lawrence did not serve with any one Arab leader aside from Auda throughout the majority of the war most such leaders were amalgamated in Ali s character Jose Ferrer as the Turkish Bey Ferrer was initially unsatisfied with the small size of his part and accepted the role only on the condition of being paid 25 000 more than O Toole and Sharif combined plus a Porsche 11 Afterwards Ferrer considered this his best film performance saying in an interview If I was to be judged by any one film performance it would be my five minutes in Lawrence Peter O Toole once said that he learned more about screen acting from Ferrer than he could in any acting class According to Lawrence in Seven Pillars of Wisdom this was General Hajim Bey in Turkish Hacim Muhiddin Bey though the film does not name him Biographers including Jeremy Wilson and John Mack have argued that Lawrence s account is to be believed others including Michael Asher and Lawrence James argue that contemporary evidence suggests that Lawrence never went to Deraa at this time and that the story is invented Anthony Quayle as Colonel Harry Brighton Quayle a veteran of military roles was cast after Jack Hawkins the original choice was shifted to the part of Allenby Quayle and Lean argued over how to portray the character with Lean feeling Brighton to be an honourable character while Quayle thought him an idiot He is in essence a composite of all of the British officers who served in the Middle East with Lawrence most notably Lt Col S F Newcombe in Michael Wilson s original script the character was named Colonel Newcombe before Robert Bolt changed it Newcombe like Brighton in the film was Lawrence s predecessor as liaison to the Arab Revolt he and many of his men were captured by the Turks in 1916 but he escaped Brighton was created to represent how ordinary British soldiers would feel about a man like Lawrence impressed by his accomplishments but repulsed by his affected manner Claude Rains as Mr Dryden Like Sherif Ali and Colonel Brighton Dryden was an amalgamation of several historical figures primarily Ronald Storrs a member of the Arab Bureau but also David Hogarth an archaeologist friend of Lawrence Henry McMahon the High Commissioner of Egypt who negotiated the McMahon Hussein Correspondence which began the Arab Revolt and Mark Sykes who helped draw up the Sykes Picot Agreement which partitioned the post war Middle East Robert Bolt stated that the character was created to represent the civilian and political wing of British interests to balance Allenby s military objectives 12 Arthur Kennedy as Jackson Bentley In the early days of the production when the Bentley character had a more prominent role in the film Kirk Douglas was considered for the part Douglas expressed interest but demanded a star salary and the highest billing after O Toole and thus was turned down by Spiegel Later Edmond O Brien was cast in the part 13 O Brien filmed the Jerusalem scene and according to Omar Sharif Bentley s political discussion with Ali but he suffered a heart attack on location and had to be replaced at the last moment by Kennedy who was recommended to Lean by Anthony Quinn 14 The character was based on famed American journalist Lowell Thomas whose reports helped make Lawrence famous Thomas was a young man at the time who spent only weeks at most with Lawrence in the field unlike Bentley who is a middle aged man present for all of Lawrence s later campaigns Bentley was the narrator in Wilson s original script but Bolt reduced his role significantly in the final treatment Donald Wolfit as General Archibald Murray He releases Lawrence to Mr Dryden Calls the British occupying Arabia a sideshow of a sideshow I S Johar as Gasim Johar was a well known Indian actor who occasionally appeared in international productions Gamil Ratib as Majid Ratib was a veteran Egyptian actor His English was not considered good enough so he was dubbed by Robert Rietti uncredited citation needed in the final edit Michel Ray as Farraj At the time Ray was a rising Anglo Brazilian actor who had appeared in several films including Irving Rapper s The Brave One 1956 and Anthony Mann s The Tin Star 1957 John Dimech as Daud Zia Mohyeddin as Tafas Mohyeddin one of Pakistan s best known actors played a character based on his actual guide Sheikh Obeid el Rashid of the Hazimi branch of the Beni Salem whom Lawrence referred to as Tafas several times in Seven Pillars Howard Marion Crawford as the medical officer He was cast at the last minute during the filming of the Damascus scenes in Seville The character was based on an officer mentioned in an incident in Seven Pillars of Wisdom Lawrence s meeting the officer again while in British uniform was an invention of the script Jack Gwillim as the club secretary Gwillim was recommended to Lean for the film by close friend Quayle Hugh Miller as the RAMC colonel He worked on several of Lean s films as a dialogue coach and was one of several members of the film crew to be given bit parts see below Peter Burton as a Damascus sheik uncredited Kenneth Fortescue as Allenby s aide uncredited 15 Harry Fowler as Corporal William Potter uncredited 16 Jack Hedley as a reporter uncredited Ian MacNaughton as Corporal Michael George Hartley Lawrence s companion in O Toole s first scene uncredited Henry Oscar as Silliam Faisal s servant uncredited Norman Rossington as Corporal Jenkins uncredited 15 John Ruddock as Elder Harith uncredited 15 Fernando Sancho as the Turkish sergeant uncredited Stuart Saunders as the regimental sergeant major uncredited Bryan Pringle as the driver of the car which takes Lawrence away at the end of the film uncredited The crew consisted of over 200 people Including cast and extras over 1 000 people worked on the film 17 Members of the crew portrayed minor characters First assistant director Roy Stevens played the truck driver who transports Lawrence and Farraj to the Cairo HQ at the end of Act I the Sergeant who stops Lawrence and Farraj Where do you think you re going to Mustapha is construction assistant Fred Bennett and screenwriter Robert Bolt has a wordless cameo as one of the officers watching Allenby and Lawrence confer in the courtyard he is smoking a pipe 18 Steve Birtles the film s gaffer plays the motorcyclist at the Suez Canal Lean is rumoured to be the voice shouting Who are you Continuity supervisor Barbara Cole appears as one of the nurses in the Damascus hospital scene citation needed Historical accuracy EditMost of the film s characters are based on people to varying degrees Some scenes were heavily fictionalised such as the Battle of Aqaba and those dealing with the Arab Council were inaccurate since the council remained more or less in power in Syria until France deposed Faisal in 1920 Little background is provided on the history of the region the First World War and the Arab Revolt probably because of Bolt s increased focus on Lawrence Wilson s draft script had a broader more politicised version of events The second half of the film presents a fictional desertion of Lawrence s Arab army almost to a man as he moved farther north The film s timeline is frequently questionable on the Arab Revolt and First World War as well as the geography of the Hejaz region Bentley s meeting with Faisal in which he mentions that the United States has not yet entered the war is in late 1917 after the fall of Aqaba Lawrence s involvement in the Arab Revolt prior to the attack on Aqaba is absent as are his involvement in the seizures of Yenbo and Wejh The rescue and the execution of Gasim are based on two incidents that were conflated for dramatic reasons The film shows Lawrence representing the Allied cause in the Hejaz almost alone with Colonel Brighton Anthony Quayle the only British officer there to assist him In fact there were numerous British officers such as colonels Cyril Wilson Stewart Newcombe and Pierce C Joyce all of whom arrived before Lawrence began serving in Arabia 19 There was a French military mission led by Colonel Edouard Bremond serving in the Hejaz but it is not mentioned in the film 20 The film shows Lawrence as the originator of the attacks on the Hejaz railway The first attacks began in early January 1917 led by officers such as Newcombe 21 The first successful attack on the Hejaz railway with a locomotive destroying Garland mine was led by Major Herbert Garland in February 1917 a month before Lawrence s first attack 22 The film shows the Hashemite forces consisting of Bedouin guerrillas but the core of the Hashemite force was the regular Arab Army recruited from Ottoman Arab prisoners of war They wore British style uniforms with keffiyehs and fought in conventional battles 23 The film makes no mention of the Sharifian Army and leaves the viewer with the impression that the Hashemite forces were composed exclusively of Bedouin irregulars Representation of Lawrence Edit Peter O Toole as T E Lawrence Many complaints about the film s accuracy concern the characterisation of Lawrence The perceived problems with the portrayal begin with the differences in his physical appearance the 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m Peter O Toole was almost 9 in 230 mm taller than the 5 ft 5 in 1 65 m Lawrence 24 and extended to his behaviour The screenwriters depict Lawrence as an egotist It is not clear to what degree Lawrence sought or shunned attention as evidenced by his use of various assumed names after the war Even during the war Lowell Thomas wrote in With Lawrence in Arabia that he could take pictures of him only by tricking him although Lawrence later agreed to pose for several photos for Thomas s stage show Thomas s famous comment that Lawrence had a genius for backing into the limelight suggests that his extraordinary actions prevented him from being as private as he would have liked or may suggest that Lawrence made a pretence of avoiding the limelight but subtly placed himself at centre stage Others point to Lawrence s writings to support the argument that he was egotistical Lawrence s sexual orientation remains a controversial topic among historians Bolt s primary source was ostensibly Seven Pillars but the film s portrayal seems informed by Richard Aldington s Biographical Inquiry 1955 which posited Lawrence as a pathological liar and exhibitionist as well as a homosexual That is opposed to his portrayal in Ross as physically and spiritually recluse 25 Historians like B H Liddell Hart disputed the film s depiction of Lawrence as an active participant in the attack and slaughter of the retreating Turkish columns who had committed the Tafas massacre but most current biographers accept the film s portrayal as reasonably accurate The film shows that Lawrence spoke and read Arabic and could quote the Quran and was reasonably knowledgeable about the region It barely mentions his archaeological travels from 1911 to 1914 in Syria and Arabia and ignores his espionage work including a pre war topographical survey of the Sinai Peninsula and his attempts to negotiate the release of British prisoners at Kut Mesopotamia in 1916 Lawrence is made aware of the Sykes Picot Agreement very late in the story and is shown to be appalled by it but he may well have known about it much earlier while he fought with the Arabs 26 Lawrence s biographers have a mixed reaction towards the film The authorised biographer Jeremy Wilson noted that the film has undoubtedly influenced the perceptions of some subsequent biographers such as the depiction of the film s Ali being a real rather than a composite character and the highlighting of the Deraa incident 27 The film s historical inaccuracies in Wilson s view are more questionable than should be allowed under normal dramatic licence Liddell Hart criticised the film and engaged Bolt in a lengthy correspondence over its portrayal of Lawrence 28 Representation of other characters Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lawrence of Arabia film news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The film portrays Allenby as cynical and manipulative with a superior attitude to Lawrence but there is much evidence that Allenby and Lawrence liked and respected each other Lawrence once said that Allenby was an admiration of mine and later that he was physically large and confident and morally so great that the comprehension of our littleness came slow to him 29 30 The fictional Allenby s words at Lawrence s funeral in the film stand in contrast to the real Allenby s remarks upon Lawrence s death I have lost a good friend and a valued comrade Lawrence was under my command but after acquainting him with my strategical plan I gave him a free hand His co operation was marked by the utmost loyalty and I never had anything but praise for his work which indeed was invaluable throughout the campaign 31 Allenby also spoke highly of him numerous times and much to Lawrence s delight publicly endorsed the accuracy of Seven Pillars of Wisdom Although Allenby manipulated Lawrence during the war their relationship lasted for years after its end likely indicating that in real life they were friendly if not close The Allenby family was particularly upset by the Damascus scenes in which Allenby coldly allows the town to fall into chaos as the Arab Council collapses 32 Murray was initially sceptical of the Arab Revolt s potential but thought highly of Lawrence s abilities as an intelligence officer It was largely through Lawrence s persuasion that Murray came to support the revolt The intense dislike shown toward Lawrence in the film is the opposite of Murray s real feelings but Lawrence seemed not to hold Murray in any high regard The depiction of Auda abu Tayi as a man interested only in loot and money is also at odds with the historical record Although Auda at first joined the revolt for monetary reasons he quickly became a steadfast supporter of Arab independence notably after Aqaba s capture Despite repeated bribery attempts by the Turks he happily pocketed their money but remained loyal to the revolt and went so far as to knock out his false teeth which were Turkish made He was present with Lawrence from the beginning of the Aqaba expedition and in fact helped to plan it along with Lawrence and Prince Faisal Faisal was far from being the middle aged man depicted since he was in his early thirties at the time of the revolt Faisal and Lawrence respected each other s capabilities and intelligence and worked well together 33 The reactions of those who knew Lawrence and the other characters cast doubt on the film s veracity The most vehement critic of its accuracy was Professor A W Lawrence T E Lawrence s younger brother and literary executor who had sold the rights to Seven Pillars of Wisdom to Spiegel for 25 000 and went on a campaign in the United States and Britain to denounce the film He famously said I should not have recognised my own brother In one pointed talk show appearance he remarked that he had found the film pretentious and false and went on to say that his brother was one of the nicest kindest and most exhilarating people I ve known He often appeared cheerful when he was unhappy Later he said to The New York Times The film is a psychological recipe Take an ounce of narcissism a pound of exhibitionism a pint of sadism a gallon of blood lust and a sprinkle of other aberrations and stir well Lowell Thomas was also critical of the portrayal of Lawrence and of most of the film s characters and believed that the train attack scenes were the only reasonably accurate aspect of the film Criticisms were not restricted to Lawrence Allenby s family lodged a formal complaint against Columbia about his portrayal Descendants of Auda abu Tayi and Sharif Nassir upon whom the film s Ali was partially based went further by suing Columbia The Auda case went on for almost 10 years before it was dropped 34 The film has its defenders Biographer Michael Korda the author of Hero The Life and Legend of Lawrence of Arabia offers a different opinion The film is neither the full story of Lawrence s life or a completely accurate account of the two years he spent fighting with the Arabs Korda said that criticising its inaccuracy misses the point The object was to produce not a faithful docudrama that would educate the audience but a hit picture 35 Stephen E Tabachnick goes further than Korda by arguing that the film s portrayal of Lawrence is appropriate and true to the text of Seven Pillars of Wisdom 36 David Murphy historian and author of the 2008 book The Arab Revolt wrote that although the film was flawed with various inaccuracies and omissions it was a truly epic movie and is rightly seen as a classic 37 Production EditPre production Edit Previous films about T E Lawrence had been planned but had not been made In the 1940s Alexander Korda was interested in filming The Seven Pillars of Wisdom with Laurence Olivier Leslie Howard or Robert Donat as Lawrence but had to pull out owing to financial difficulties David Lean had been approached to direct a 1952 version for the Rank Organisation but the project fell through 38 At the same time as pre production of the film Terence Rattigan was developing his play Ross which centred primarily on Lawrence s alleged homosexuality Ross had begun as a screenplay but was re written for the stage when the film project fell through Sam Spiegel grew furious and attempted to have the play suppressed which helped to gain publicity for the film 39 Dirk Bogarde had accepted the role in Ross he described the cancellation of the project as my bitterest disappointment Alec Guinness played the role on stage 40 Lean and Sam Spiegel had worked together on The Bridge on the River Kwai and decided to collaborate again For a time Lean was interested in a biopic of Gandhi with Alec Guinness to play the title role and Emeric Pressburger writing the screenplay He eventually lost interest in the project despite extensive pre production work including location scouting in India and a meeting with Jawaharlal Nehru 41 Lean then returned his attention to T E Lawrence Columbia Pictures had an interest in a Lawrence project dating back to the early 50s and the project got underway when Spiegel convinced a reluctant A W Lawrence to sell the rights to Seven Pillars of Wisdom for 22 500 42 Michael Wilson wrote the original draft of the screenplay Lean was dissatisfied with Wilson s work primarily because his treatment focused on the historical and political aspects of the Arab Revolt Lean hired Robert Bolt to re write the script to make it a character study of Lawrence Many of the characters and scenes are Wilson s invention but virtually all of the dialogue in the finished film was written by Bolt 43 Lean reportedly watched John Ford s 1956 film The Searchers to help him develop ideas as to how to shoot the film Several scenes directly recall Ford s film most notably Ali s entrance at the well and the composition of many of the desert scenes and the dramatic exit from Wadi Rum Lean biographer Kevin Brownlow noted a physical similarity between Wadi Rum and Ford s Monument Valley 44 In an interview with The Washington Post in 1989 Lean said that Lawrence and Ali were written as being in a gay relationship When asked about whether the film was pervasively homoerotic Lean responded Yes Of course it is Throughout I ll never forget standing there in the desert once with some of these tough Arab buggers some of the toughest we had and I suddenly thought He s making eyes at me And he was So it does pervade it the whole story and certainly Lawrence was very if not entirely homosexual We thought we were being very daring at the time Lawrence and Omar Lawrence and the Arab boys 45 Lean also compared Ali and Lawrence s romance in the film to the relationship of the two main characters in his 1945 film Brief Encounter 46 Filming Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The film was made by Horizon Pictures and distributed by Columbia Pictures Principal photography began on 15 May 1961 and ended on 21 September 1962 47 The desert scenes were shot in Jordan and Morocco and Almeria and Donana in Spain It was originally to be filmed entirely in Jordan the government of King Hussein was extremely helpful in providing logistical assistance location scouting transport and extras Hussein visited the set several times during production and maintained cordial relationships with cast and crew The only tension occurred when Jordanian officials learned that English actor Henry Oscar did not speak Arabic but would be filmed reciting the Quran Permission was granted only on condition that an imam be present to ensure that there were no misquotations The Mudejar pavilion of the Parque de Maria Luisa in Seville appeared as Damascus The Plaza de Espana Seville appeared as Britain s Egyptian Expeditionary Force Headquarters in Cairo which included the officers club Lean planned to film in Aqaba and the archaeological site at Petra which Lawrence had been fond of as a place of study The production had to be moved to Spain due to cost and outbreaks of illness among the cast and crew before these scenes could be shot The attack on Aqaba was reconstructed in a dried river bed in Playa del Algarrobico southern Spain at 37 1 25 N 1 52 53 W 37 02361 N 1 88139 W 37 02361 1 88139 it consisted of more than 300 buildings and was meticulously based on the town s appearance in 1917 The execution of Gasim the train attacks and Deraa exteriors were filmed in the Almeria region with some of the filming being delayed because of a flash flood The Sierra Nevada mountains filled in for Azrak Lawrence s winter quarters The city of Seville was used to represent Cairo Jerusalem and Damascus with the appearance of Casa de Pilatos the Alcazar of Seville and the Plaza de Espana All of the interiors were shot in Spain including Lawrence s first meeting with Faisal and the scene in Auda s tent The Tafas massacre was filmed in Ouarzazate Morocco with Moroccan soldiers substituting for the Turkish army Lean could not film as much as he wanted because the soldiers were uncooperative and impatient 48 The film s production was frequently delayed because shooting commenced without a finished script Wilson quit early in the production and the playwright Beverley Cross worked on the script in the interim before Bolt took over although none of Cross s material made it to the film When Bolt was arrested for taking part in an anti nuclear weapons demonstration Spiegel had to persuade him to sign a recognizance of good behaviour to be released from jail and continue working on the script O Toole was not used to riding camels and found the saddle to be uncomfortable During a break in filming he bought a piece of foam rubber at a market and added it to his saddle Many of the extras copied the idea and sheets of the foam can be seen on many of the horse and camel saddles The Bedouin nicknamed O Toole Ab al Isfanjah أب الإسفنجة meaning Father of the Sponge 49 During the filming of the Aqaba scene O Toole was nearly killed when he fell from his camel but it stood over him preventing the extras horses from trampling him Coincidentally a very similar mishap befell the real Lawrence at the Battle of Abu El Lissal in 1917 citation needed Super Panavision technology was used to shoot the film meaning that spherical lenses were used instead of anamorphic ones and the image was exposed on a 65 mm negative then printed onto a 70 mm positive to leave room for the soundtracks Rapid cutting was more disturbing on the wide screen so film makers had to apply longer and more fluid takes Shooting such a wide ratio produced some unwanted effects during projection such as a peculiar flutter effect a blurring of certain parts of the image To avoid the problem the director often had to modify blocking giving the actor a more diagonal movement where the flutter was less likely to occur 50 Lean was asked whether he could handle CinemaScope If one had an eye for composition there would be no problem 51 O Toole did not share Lawrence s love of the desert and stated in an interview I loathe it 52 Music Edit The film score was composed by Maurice Jarre little known at the time and selected only after both William Walton and Malcolm Arnold had proved unavailable Jarre was given just six weeks to compose two hours of orchestral music for Lawrence 53 The score was performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra Sir Adrian Boult is listed as the conductor of the score in the film s credits but he could not conduct most of the score due in part to his failure to adapt to the intricate timings of each cue and Jarre replaced him as the conductor The score went on to garner Jarre his first Academy Award for Music Score Substantially Original 54 and is now considered one of the greatest scores of all time ranking number three on the American Film Institute s top twenty five film scores 55 Producer Sam Spiegel wanted to create a score with two themes to show the Eastern and British side for the film It was intended for Soviet composer Aram Khachaturian to create one half and British composer Benjamin Britten to write the other 56 The original soundtrack recording was originally released on Colpix Records the records division of Columbia Pictures in 1962 A remastered edition appeared on Castle Music a division of the Sanctuary Records Group on 28 August 2006 Kenneth Alford s march The Voice of the Guns 1917 is prominently featured on the soundtrack One of Alford s other pieces the Colonel Bogey March was the musical theme for Lean s previous film The Bridge on the River Kwai A complete recording of the score was not heard until 2010 when Tadlow Music produced a CD of the music with Nic Raine conducting the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra from scores reconstructed by Leigh Phillips Release EditTheatrical run Edit The film premiered at the Odeon Leicester Square in London on 10 December 1962 and was released in the United States on 16 December 1962 Jordan banned the film for what was felt to be a disrespectful portrayal of Arab culture 8 Egypt Omar Sharif s home country was the only Arab nation to give the film a wide release where it became a success through the endorsement of President Gamal Abdel Nasser who appreciated the film s depiction of Arab nationalism Theatrical poster from 1962 during its release The original release ran for about 222 minutes plus overture intermission and exit music A post premiere memo 13 December 1962 noted that the film was 24 987 5 feet 7 616 2 m of 70 mm film or 19 990 feet 6 090 m of 35 mm film With 90 feet 27 m of 35 mm film projected every minute this corresponds to exactly 222 11 minutes Richard May vice president of Film Preservation at Warner Bros sent an email to Robert Morris co author of a book on Lawrence of Arabia in which he noted that Gone With the Wind 1939 was never edited after its premiere and is 19 884 feet 6 061 m of 35 mm film without leaders overture intermission entr acte or walkout music corresponding to 220 93 min citation needed Thus Lawrence of Arabia is slightly more than one minute longer than Gone With the Wind and is therefore the longest movie ever to win a Best Picture Oscar citation needed In January 1963 Lawrence of Arabia was released in a version edited by 20 minutes 57 In the United States the film was released in five key cities New York Los Angeles Philadelphia Boston and Miami Beach By February 1963 the film expanded into six more reserved seating engagements 58 When it was re released in 1971 an even shorter cut of 187 minutes was presented 57 The first round of cuts was made at the direction and even insistence of David Lean to assuage criticisms of the film s length and increase the number of showings per day however during the 1989 restoration he passed blame for the cuts onto deceased producer Sam Spiegel 59 60 In addition a 1966 print was used for initial television and video releases which accidentally altered a few scenes by reversing the image 61 The film was screened out of competition at the 1989 Cannes Film Festival 62 and at the 2012 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival 63 Lawrence of Arabia was re released theatrically in 2002 to celebrate the film s fortieth anniversary 64 Restored director s cut Edit A restored version was undertaken by Robert A Harris and Jim Painten under the supervision of David Lean It was released in 1989 with a 216 minute length plus overture intermission and exit music Most of the cut scenes were dialogue sequences particularly those involving General Allenby and his staff Two scenes were excised Brighton s briefing of Allenby in Jerusalem before the Deraa scene and the British staff meeting in the field tent and the Allenby briefing scene has still not been entirely restored Much of the missing dialogue involves Lawrence s writing of poetry and verse alluded to by Allenby in particular saying the last poetry general we had was Wellington The opening of Act II existed in only fragmented form where Faisal is interviewed by Bentley as well as the later scene in Jerusalem where Allenby convinces Lawrence not to resign Both scenes were restored to the 1989 re release Some of the more graphic shots of the Tafas massacre scene were also restored such as the lengthy panning shot of the corpses in Tafas and Lawrence shooting a surrendering Turkish soldier Most of the missing footage is of minimal import supplementing existing scenes One scene is an extended version of the Deraa torture sequence which makes Lawrence s punishment more overt Other scripted scenes exist including a conversation between Auda and Lawrence immediately after the fall of Aqaba a brief scene of Turkish officers noting the extent of Lawrence s campaign and the battle of Petra later reworked into the first train attack but these scenes were probably not filmed Living actors dubbed their dialogue and Jack Hawkins s dialogue was dubbed by Charles Gray who had provided Hawkins voice for several films after Hawkins developed throat cancer in the late 1960s 65 A full list of cuts can be found at the IMDb 66 Reasons for the cuts of various scenes can be found in Lean s notes to Sam Spiegel Robert Bolt and Anne V Coates 67 The film runs 227 minutes in the most recent director s cut available on Blu ray Disc and DVD 2 Home media Edit Lawrence of Arabia has been released in five different DVD editions including an initial release as a two disc set 2001 68 followed by a shorter single disc edition 2002 69 a high resolution version of the director s cut with restored scenes 2003 issued as part of the Superbit series as part of the Columbia Best Pictures collection 2008 and in a fully restored special edition of the director s cut 2008 70 Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg helped restore a version of the film for a DVD release in 2000 71 New restoration Blu ray and theatrical re release Edit An 8K scan 4K intermediate digital restoration was made for Blu ray and theatrical re release 72 during 2012 by Sony Pictures to celebrate the film s 50th anniversary 73 The Blu ray edition of the film was released in the United Kingdom on 10 September 2012 and in the United States on 13 November 2012 74 The film received a one day theatrical release on 4 October 2012 and a two day release in Canada on 11 and 15 November 2012 and it was re released in the United Kingdom on 23 November 2012 According to Grover Crisp executive VP of restoration at Sony Pictures the new 8K scan has such high resolution that it showed a series of fine concentric lines in a pattern reminiscent of a fingerprint near the top of the frame This was caused by the film emulsion melting and cracking in the desert heat during production Sony had to hire a third party to minimise or eliminate the rippling artefacts in the new restored version 72 The digital restoration was done by Sony Colorworks DI Prasad Studios and MTI Film 75 A 4K digitally restored version of the film was screened at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival 76 77 at the 2012 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival 63 at the V Janela Internacional de Cinema 78 in Recife Brazil and at the 2013 Cinequest Film amp Creativity Festival in San Jose California 79 In 2020 Sony Pictures reissued the film on a multi film 4K UHD Blu Ray release called the Columbia Classics 4K UltraHD Collection which included other historically significant films from their library such as Dr Strangelove 1964 and Mr Smith Goes to Washington 1939 80 In honor of the film s 60th anniversary the film was re released in an individual two disc steelbook set by Kino Lorber with both including a substantial mostly overlapping collection of special features 81 Reception EditBox office Edit During its initial theatrical run the film earned 15 million in box office rentals in the United States and Canada 82 Critical reaction Edit Bosley Crowther of The New York Times called the film vast awe inspiring beautiful with ever changing hues exhausting and barren of humanity He further wrote Lawrence s characterization was lost within the spectacle writing the film reduces a legendary figure to conventional movie hero size amidst magnificent and exotic scenery but a conventional lot of action film cliches 83 Similarly Variety wrote the film was a sweepingly produced directed and lensed job Authentic desert locations a stellar cast and an intriguing subject combine to put this into the blockbuster league However it later noted Bolt s screenplay does not tell the audience anything much new about Lawrence of Arabia nor does it offer any opinion or theory about the character of this man or the motivation for his actions 84 Philip K Scheuer of the Los Angeles Times wrote It is also one of the most magnificent pictures if not the magnificent and one of the most exasperating The awesome majesty of the landscapes in Jordan and elsewhere the mass movements of Bedouins and British and Turks with of course the ever present camels sweep against the eye long after one has lost the ability to exclaim in astonishment over them And all this is Technicolor and Super Panavision 70 the finest process under F A Young as director of photography Maurice Jarre composed a score to match 85 Time magazine felt that while Lawrence of Arabia falls far short of Kwai in dramatic impact it nevertheless presents a vivid and intelligent spectacle It further praised O Toole s performance writing he continually dominates the screen and he dominates it with professional skill Irish charm and smashing good looks 86 The Chicago Tribune wrote the photography was no less than superb and felt the script is taut and expressive and the musical score deftly attuned to the tale Director David Lean has molded his massive material with skill but personally I felt the film was too long the running time is 221 minutes or 20 minutes short of 4 hours and in the latter part unnecessarily bloody 87 A review in Newsweek praised the film as an admirably seriously film The size the scope the fantastical scale of his personality and his achievement is triumphantly there It also praised the ensemble cast as all as good as they ought to be And Peter O Toole is not only good he is an unnerving look alike of the real Lawrence He is reliably unreliable steadily mercurial 88 In 1998 the American Film Institute ranked Lawrence of Arabia in fifth place in their list of 100 Years 100 Movies In 2007 it was ranked in seventh place in its updated list and listed as the first of the greatest American films of the epic genre 89 In 1991 the film was deemed culturally historically or aesthetically significant by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry 6 In 1999 the film placed third in the British Film Institute s poll of the best British films of the 20th century and in 2001 the magazine Total Film called it as shockingly beautiful and hugely intelligent as any film ever made and faultless 90 It was ranked in the top ten films of all time in the 2002 Sight amp Sound directors poll 91 In 2004 it was voted the best British film of all time by over 200 respondents in The Sunday Telegraph poll of Britain s leading film makers 92 O Toole s performance is often considered one of the greatest in all of cinema topping lists from Entertainment Weekly and Premiere T E Lawrence portrayed by O Toole was selected as the tenth greatest hero in cinema history by the American Film Institute 93 In 2012 the Motion Picture Editors Guild listed the film as the seventh best edited film of all time based on a survey of its membership 94 Lawrence of Arabia is currently one of the highest rated films on Metacritic it holds a perfect 100 rating indicating universal acclaim based on eight reviews 95 It has a 94 Certified Fresh approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 132 reviews with an average rating of 9 30 10 Its critical consensus reads The epic of all epics Lawrence of Arabia cements director David Lean s status in the film making pantheon with nearly four hours of grand scope brilliant performances and beautiful cinematography 96 The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited this movie as one of his 100 favourite films 97 Awards and honours Edit Award Category Nominee s ResultAcademy Awards 98 Best Picture Sam Spiegel WonBest Director David Lean WonBest Actor Peter O Toole NominatedBest Supporting Actor Omar Sharif NominatedBest Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson NominatedBest Art Direction Color John Box John Stoll and Dario Simoni WonBest Cinematography Color Freddie Young WonBest Film Editing Anne V Coates WonBest Music Score Substantially Original Maurice Jarre WonBest Sound John Cox WonAmerican Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Anne V Coates NominatedBritish Academy Film Awards 99 Best Film from any Source WonBest British Film WonBest British Actor Peter O Toole WonBest Foreign Actor Anthony Quinn NominatedBest British Screenplay Robert Bolt WonBritish Society of Cinematographers 100 Best Cinematography Freddie Young WonDavid di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Production Sam Spiegel WonBest Foreign Actor Peter O Toole Won a Directors Guild of America Awards 101 Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures David Lean WonGolden Globe Awards 102 Best Motion Picture Drama WonBest Actor in a Motion Picture Drama Peter O Toole NominatedAnthony Quinn NominatedBest Supporting Actor Motion Picture Omar Sharif WonBest Director Motion Picture David Lean WonMost Promising Newcomer Male Peter O Toole WonOmar Sharif WonBest Cinematography Color Freddie Young WonGrammy Awards 103 Best Original Score from a Motion Picture or Television Show Maurice Jarre NominatedInternational Film Music Critics Association Awards 104 Best Archival Release of an Existing Score Maurice Jarre Nic Raine Jim Fitzpatrick and Frank K DeWald NominatedKinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film David Lean WonLaurel Awards Top Road Show WonTop Male Dramatic Performance Peter O Toole NominatedTop Male Supporting Performance Omar Sharif NominatedTop Song Maurice Jarre for the Theme Song NominatedNastro d Argento Best Foreign Director David Lean WonNational Board of Review Awards 105 Top Ten Films 4th PlaceBest Director David Lean WonNational Film Preservation Board National Film Registry InductedOnline Film amp Television Association Awards 106 Hall of Fame Motion Picture WonProducers Guild of America Awards PGA Hall of Fame Motion Pictures Sam Spiegel WonSaturn Awards Best DVD or Blu ray Special Edition Release Lawrence of Arabia 50th Anniversary Collector s Edition NominatedWriters Guild of Great Britain Awards Best British Dramatic Screenplay Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson WonLegacy EditIts visual style has influenced many directors including George Lucas Sam Peckinpah Stanley Kubrick Martin Scorsese Ridley Scott Brian De Palma Oliver Stone and Steven Spielberg who called the film a miracle 107 Spielberg further considered it his favourite film of all time and the one that inspired him to become a filmmaker 108 crediting the film which he saw four times in four successive weeks upon its release with understanding It was the first time seeing a movie I realized there are themes that aren t narrative story themes there are themes that are character themes that are personal themes and I realized there was no going back It was what I was going to do 109 Film director Kathryn Bigelow also considers it one of her favourite films saying it inspired her to film The Hurt Locker in Jordan 110 Lawrence of Arabia also inspired numerous other adventure science fiction and fantasy stories in modern popular culture including Frank Herbert s Dune franchise George Lucas s Star Wars franchise James Cameron s Avatar franchise Ridley Scott s Prometheus 2012 George Miller s Mad Max Fury Road 2015 111 and Disney s Frozen franchise 112 Later film EditMain article A Dangerous Man Lawrence After Arabia In 1990 the made for television film A Dangerous Man Lawrence After Arabia was aired It depicts events in the lives of Lawrence and Faisal subsequent to Lawrence of Arabia and featured Ralph Fiennes as Lawrence and Alexander Siddig as Prince Faisal See also EditBFI Top 100 British films Clash of Loyalties Lawrence of Arabia The Authorised Biography of T E Lawrence List of films considered the best White savior narrative in film Whitewashing in filmNotes Edit Tied with Fredric March for Seven Days in May References Edit a b Lawrence of Arabia 1962 Archived 27 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine AFI Catalog a b Lawrence of Arabia British Board of Film Classification Archived from the original on 8 October 2020 Retrieved 10 February 2023 Lawrence of Arabia 1962 BFI Retrieved 30 October 2022 a b Lawrence of Arabia The Numbers Archived from the original on 13 January 2015 Retrieved 13 January 2015 Complete National Film Registry Listing Library of Congress Archived from the original on 8 October 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 a b Andrews Robert M 26 September 1991 25 Classics Join U S Film Registry Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 15 September 2015 Retrieved 4 September 2015 Turner 1994 pp 41 45 a b Woolf Christopher 16 December 2013 Is Peter O Toole s Lawrence of Arabia fact or fiction PRI Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Lane Anthony 31 March 2008 Master and Commander The New Yorker Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Retrieved 26 February 2011 Turner 1994 pp 45 49 Turner 1994 p 49 Lawrence of Arabia or Smith in the Desert Archived from the original on 29 September 2011 Retrieved 8 March 2021 Turner 1994 p 51 Turner 1994 pp 137 38 a b c Daniel Eagan 2010 America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black pp 586 ISBN 978 0 8264 2977 3 Archived from the original on 24 July 2019 Retrieved 2 February 2019 Baxter Brian 4 January 2012 Harry Fowler obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on 9 January 2012 Retrieved 2 February 2019 Jackson 2007 p 59 Phillips 2006 p 296 Murphy 2008 p 17 Murphy 2008 p 18 Murphy 2008 p 39 Murphy 2008 pp 43 44 Murphy 2008 p 24 Orlans Harold 2002 T E Lawrence Biography of a Broken Hero McFarland p 111 ISBN 0 7864 1307 7 Weintraub Stanley 1964 Lawrence of Arabia Film Quarterly 17 3 51 54 doi 10 2307 1210914 JSTOR 1210914 cf Jeremy Wilson Lawrence of Arabia The Authorised Biography of T E Lawrence 1990 pp 409 10 Wilson Jeremy Lawrence of Arabia or Smith in the Desert T E Lawrence Studies Archived from the original on 23 July 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 Morris amp Raskin 1992 pp 149 156 The Seven Pillars Portraits Castle Hill Press Archived from the original on 13 March 2006 Retrieved 21 January 2006 General Allenby biography pbs org Archived from the original on 25 November 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2017 General Allenby radio interview pbs org Archived from the original on 14 March 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2017 Steven C Caton Lawrence of Arabia A Film s Anthropology p 59 Prince Feisal pbs org Archived from the original on 19 September 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2017 Adrian Turner Robert Bolt Scenes From Two Lives 201 06 Korda pp 693 94 Lawrence of Arabia An Encyclopedia Westport CT Greenwood Press 2004 p 24 Murphy 2008 pp 88 89 Phillips 2006 p 258 Brownlow 1996 pp 410 11 Sellers Robert 2015 Peter O Toole The Definitive Biography London Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 0 283 07216 1 my bitterest disappointment Brownlow 1996 pp 393 401 Phillips 2006 p 271 Phillips 2006 pp 270 282 Brownlow 1996 p 443 Yardley Jonathan 3 February 1989 David Lean Sorcerer of the Screen The Washington Post Archived from the original on 30 December 2022 Retrieved 14 March 2022 Bourne Stephen 2016 Brief Encounters Lesbians and Gays in British Cinema 1930 1971 Bloomsbury Publishing p 169 ISBN 978 1 4742 9134 7 Phillips 2006 pp 291 303 Brownlow 1996 pp 466 467 Peter O Toole interview on the Late Show with David Letterman 11 May 1995 Caton Steven Charles 1950 Lawrence of Arabia A Film s Anthropology Los Angeles University of California Press pp 70 71 ISBN 0 520 21082 4 Santas Constantine 2012 The Epic Films of David Lean Plymouth UK The Scarecrow Press Inc p xxvi Peter O Toole talks about Lawrence of Arabia in rare 1963 interview YouTube Archived from the original on 24 July 2019 Retrieved 4 November 2014 The Economist Obituary Maurice Jarre 16 April 2009 Oscars org Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Awardsdatabase oscars org 29 January 2010 Maurice Jarre on Archived 25 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Afi com 23 September 2005 Jackson 2007 p 90 a b Farber Stephen 2 May 1971 Look What They ve Done to Lawrence of Arabia Now The New York Times p D11 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Six More Key City Dates Set for Lawrence Boxoffice 21 January 1963 Retrieved 29 December 2022 via Internet Archive Brownlow 1996 pp 484 705 709 Rothman Cliff 29 January 1989 The Resurrection of Lawrence of Arabia Los Angeles Times Retrieved 29 December 2022 Caton S C 1999 Lawrence of Arabia A Film s Anthropology pp 129 31 Berkeley Los Angeles CA University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21082 4 Festival de Cannes Lawrence of Arabia festival cannes com Archived from the original on 19 January 2012 Retrieved 3 August 2009 a b anniversaryKarlovy Vary International Film Festival Lawrence of Arabia fullmovieis org Archived from the original on 29 September 2018 Retrieved 4 July 2012 Farber Stephen 15 September 2002 1962 When the Silver Screen Never Looked So Golden The New York Times Section 2 p 24 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Lawrence of Arabia review The Guardian 25 November 2012 Retrieved 29 November 2022 Alternate versions for Lawrence of Arabia 1962 imdb com Archived from the original on 25 January 2018 Retrieved 1 July 2018 Director s Notes on Re editing Lawrence of Arabia davidlean com Archived from the original on 7 March 2010 Apar Bruce 5 April 2001 Lawrence Star O Toole Marvels at DVD hive4media com Archived from the original on 18 April 2001 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Rivero Enrique 20 June 2002 Columbia Trims Its DVDs hive4media com Archived from the original on 2 July 2002 Retrieved 12 September 2019 Lawrence of Arabia Collector s Edition DVD Archived from the original on 12 October 2013 Retrieved 4 January 2012 Wasser Frederick 2010 Steven Spielberg s America Polity America Through the Lens Polity p 222 ISBN 978 0 7456 4082 2 a b Rob Sabin 20 December 2011 Home Theater Hollywood The 4K Way HomeTheater com Ultimate Tech Source Interlink Media Archived from the original on 22 February 2013 Retrieved 24 February 2013 Lawrence of Arabia on Blu ray Later This Year Archived 18 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Blu rayDefinition com 12 June 2012 Lawrence of Arabia Blu ray Disc Release Finalized Archived 11 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Hometheater about com 7 August 2012 CreativeCOW creativecow net Archived from the original on 11 September 2014 Retrieved 8 March 2016 Cannes Classics 2012 Festival de Cannes 2013 International Film Festival Archived 15 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Festival cannes fr Smith Nigel M 26 May 2012 Jaws Lawrence of Arabia Once Upon a Time in America and Tess to Get the Cannes Classics Treatment Indiewire Archived from the original on 26 May 2012 Janela Internacional de Cinema do Recife Festival Internacional de Cinema do Recife Archived 11 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Janeladecinema com br cinequest org Columbia Classics 4K UltraHD Collection Sony Pictures Archived from the original on 22 May 2021 Lawrence of Arabia 60th Anniversary Limited Edition The Digital Bits 6 June 2022 Retrieved 27 September 2021 All Time Top Grossers Variety 6 January 1965 p 39 Retrieved 29 December 2022 via Internet Archive Crowther Bosley 17 December 1962 Screen A Desert Warfare Spectacle The New York Times p 5 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Film Reviews Lawrence of Arabia Variety 19 December 1962 p 6 Retrieved 29 December 2022 via Internet Archive Scheuer Philip K 17 December 1962 Lawrence Superb but Exasperating Los Angeles Times Part IV p 17 Retrieved 29 December 2022 via Newspapers com Cinema The Spirit in the Wind Time 4 January 1963 p 58 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Desert Shots Superb in Lawrence Chicago Tribune 17 January 1963 Part 3 p 15 Retrieved 29 December 2022 via Newspapers com All Star All Good Newsweek 24 December 1962 p 64 American Film Institute 17 June 2008 AFI Crowns Top 10 Films in 10 Classic Genres ComingSoon net Archived from the original on 19 June 2008 Retrieved 18 June 2008 Film Total 18 September 2010 Lawrence Of Arabia Two Disc Set Review TotalFilm com Archived 19 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine The directors top ten films British Film Institute Archived from the original on 20 June 2017 Retrieved 9 April 2017 Hastings Chris Govan Fiona 15 August 2004 Stars vote Lawrence of Arabia the best British film of all time The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 6 July 2009 Retrieved 2 May 2010 AFI s 100 Years 100 Heroes and Villains Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine AFI Retrieved 20 December 2013 The 75 Best Edited Films Editors Guild Magazine 1 3 May 2012 Archived from the original on 17 March 2015 Lawrence of Arabia re release Metacritic Red Ventures Archived from the original on 27 October 2017 Retrieved 2 November 2017 Lawrence of Arabia 1962 Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on 18 December 2022 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Thomas Mason Lee 12 January 2021 From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time Far Out Magazine Retrieved 23 January 2023 The 35th Academy Awards 1963 Nominees and Winners oscars org Archived from the original on 2 February 2018 Retrieved 23 August 2011 BAFTA Awards Film in 1963 BAFTA 1963 Retrieved 16 September 2016 Best Cinematography in Feature Film PDF Retrieved 3 June 2021 15th DGA Awards Directors Guild of America Awards Retrieved 5 July 2021 Lawrence of Arabia Golden Globes HFPA Retrieved 5 July 2021 1963 Grammy Award Winners Grammy com Retrieved 1 May 2011 IFMCA 2011 2010 IFMCA Awards IFMCA IFMCA Retrieved 1 May 2020 1962 Award Winners National Board of Review Retrieved 5 July 2021 Film Hall of Fame Productions Online Film amp Television Association Retrieved 15 May 2021 Stephens Dan 16 September 2010 Lawrence of Arabia The film that inspired Steven Spielberg Top 10 Films Archived from the original on 17 November 2010 DVD documentary A Conversation with Steven Spielberg Lacy Susan 5 October 2021 Spielberg Documentary film Kathryn Bigelow s 5 favourite films Far Out Magazine 3 April 2022 Retrieved 9 April 2022 Lawrence Of Arabia Is The Unlikely Prequel To Star Wars Dune And All Your Favorite Fantasy Epics Decider com New York Post 3 December 2015 Archived from the original on 16 June 2019 Retrieved 14 June 2019 Frozen creators It s Disney but a little different Metro 8 December 2013 Archived from the original on 8 December 2013 Retrieved 14 June 2019 Sources EditBrownlow Kevin 1996 David Lean A Biography Richard Cohen Books ISBN 978 1 86066 042 9 Jackson Kevin 2007 Lawrence of Arabia BFI Film Classics British Film Institute ISBN 978 1 8445 7178 9 Phillips Gene D 2006 Beyond the Epic The Life and Films of David Lean Lexington University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 2415 5 Turner Adrian 1994 The Making of David Lean sLawrence of Arabia Dragon s World Ltd ISBN 978 1 85028 211 2 Further reading EditMorris L Robert Raskin Lawrence 1992 Lawrence of Arabia The 30th Anniversary Pictorial History New York Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 3854 2479 0 Murphy David 2008 The Arab Revolt 1916 1918 London Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 8460 3339 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lawrence of Arabia film Wikiquote has quotations related to Lawrence of Arabia film Lawrence of Arabia by Michael Wilmington on the National Film Registry website Lawrence of Arabia at IMDb Lawrence of Arabia at the TCM Movie Database Lawrence of Arabia at Box Office Mojo Lawrence of Arabia at Rotten Tomatoes Lawrence of Arabia at Metacritic Lawrence of Arabia at the American Film Institute Catalog Lawrence of Arabia essay by Daniel Eagan in America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black 2010 ISBN 0826429777 pages 586 588 America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry The Making of Lawrence of Arabia Digitised BAFTA Journal Winter 1962 1963 Portals Film World War I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lawrence of Arabia film amp oldid 1138619237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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