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Lawrence of Arabia Poster

Lawrence of Arabia (1962)

216 min  -  Adventure | Biography | Drama   -  30 January 1963 (Canada)
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 8.5/10 X  
Users: (83,048 votes) 449 reviews | Critics: 109 reviews Metascore: 100/100 (based on 7 reviews from Metacritic.com)

Epic rumination on a flamboyant and controversial British military figure and his conflicted loyalties during wartime service.

Director:

David Lean

Writers:

T.E. Lawrence (writings), Robert Bolt (screenplay), and 1 more credit »
Watch Trailer »
Top 250 #52 | Won 7 Oscars. Another 19 wins & 12 nominations See more awards »
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Cast

Cast overview, first billed only:
Peter O'Toole Peter O'Toole ...
Alec Guinness Alec Guinness ...
Anthony Quinn Anthony Quinn ...
Jack Hawkins Jack Hawkins ...
Omar Sharif Omar Sharif ...
José Ferrer José Ferrer ...
Turkish Bey (as Jose Ferrer)
Anthony Quayle Anthony Quayle ...
Claude Rains Claude Rains ...
Arthur Kennedy Arthur Kennedy ...
Donald Wolfit Donald Wolfit ...
I.S. Johar I.S. Johar ...
Gamil Ratib Gamil Ratib ...
Michel Ray Michel Ray ...
John Dimech John Dimech ...
Zia Mohyeddin Zia Mohyeddin ...
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Storyline

An inordinately complex man who has been labeled everything from hero, to charlatan, to sadist, Thomas Edward Lawrence blazed his way to glory in the Arabian desert, then sought anonymity as a common soldier under an assumed name. The story opens with the death of Lawrence in a motorcycle accident in London at the age of 47, then flashbacks to recount his adventures: as a young intelligence officer in Cairo in 1916, he is given leave to investigate the progress of the Arab revolt against the Turks in World War I. In the desert, he organizes a guerrilla army and--for two years--leads the Arabs in harassing the Turks with desert raids, train-wrecking and camel attacks. Eventually, he leads his army northward and helps a British General destroy the power of the Ottoman Empire. Written by alfiehitchie  

Plot Summary | Add Synopsis

Plot Keywords:

Desert | Turk | Army | Arab | Arabian  | See more »

Taglines:

A Mighty Motion Picture Of Action And Adventure! See more »

Genres:

Adventure | Biography | Drama | History | War

Parents Guide:

View content advisory »
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Details

Country:

UK

Language:

English | Arabic | Turkish

Release Date:

30 January 1963 (Canada) See more »

Also Known As:

Lawrence de Arabia See more »

Box Office

Budget:

$15,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend:

$20,846 (USA) (22 September 2002) (2 Screens)

Gross:

$342,481 (USA) (27 October 2002)
See more »

Company Credits

Production Co:

Horizon Pictures (II) See more »
Show detailed company contact information on IMDbPro »

Technical Specs

Runtime:

216 min  | UK: 228 min (director's cut)  | UK: 187 min (1970 re-release)  | UK: 210 min (original version)  | UK: 222 min (premiere version)  | USA: 227 min (restored roadshow version)

Sound Mix:

70 mm 6-Track (RCA Sound Recording) (70 mm prints) | Dolby SR (35 mm prints) (restored version) | Mono (35 mm prints) (original version) | 4-Track Stereo (magnetic prints) (35 mm) (original version) | DTS 70 mm (70mm restored version)

Color:

Color (Technicolor)

Aspect Ratio:

2.20 : 1
See full technical specs »

MOVIEmeter:

Down 12% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro
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Did You Know?

Trivia

When film conservationists Robert A. Harris and Jim Painten got permission form Columbia to restore David Lean's film, four tons of extraneous footage was delivered to their door. It took them nearly a year to get through all the material. See more »

Goofs

Revealing mistakes: In the opening scene he is riding a motorcycle at high speeds, but his hair does not get swept back as it would at high speeds. See more »

Quotes

[first lines]
Colonel Brighton: He was the most extraordinary man I ever knew.
Vicar at St. Paul's: Well nil nisi bonum. But did he really deserve... all this?
Colonel Brighton: He was a remarkable chap. By any counts, remarkable.
Vicar at St. Paul's: Did you know him well?
Colonel Brighton: I knew him.
See more »

Crazy Credits

The opening credits read: Introducing Peter O'Toole as T.E. Lawrence. However, O'Toole had already played very noticeable roles in two feature-length films, the Disney 1960 version of Kidnapped, and The Day They Robbed the Bank of England. See more »

Connections

Referenced in Florence of Arabia (2012) See more »

Soundtracks

"The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo"
(1892) (uncredited)
Music and Lyrics by Fred Gilbert
Sung a cappella by Peter O'Toole See more »

Frequently Asked Questions

See more (Spoiler Alert!) »

User Reviews

 
Still my personal favourite
26 January 2005 | by iain_connell (United Kingdom) – See all my reviews

I first saw this film on its release, aged 13, and it forms an important part of my transition towards adulthood. I am pleased to see that it consistently rates 20something in the IMDb listings, even from others (whom I envy, for I can't see it with fresh eyes) who are seeing it for the first time. Pleasing too is that some of those are also teenagers, for whom a forty-three year old film must itself seem part of the past. As for the minority who are bored by intentionally slow pacing (and for whom punctuation, paragraphing and grammar are a lost art), I suggest they learn a little about the history of film-making (from which it may become apparent that much of today's fast editing techniques were invented in the 1920s: try Eisenstein's October, for example).

From the universally admired cinematography of Freddie Young, the long shot of Omar Sharif's floating mirage entry, the pre-CGI battles and pan-up scene changes, to O'Toole's florid but career-defining performance and the (then) novel time-shift narrative, this film set standards not matched even by Lean himself, and, as many reviewers have commented, financially and practically unlikely to be attempted today. I too have rarely seen such clarity of image outside of Imax, and in my view the script by Robert Bolt (and I now have learnt, an uncredited Michael Wilson) is the finest in cinema. Maurice Jarre's music and some of the acting style now seem a little excessive, but repeated viewing (around 35 times in my case) does not diminish the impact and quality, and the restoration and now DVD release still, after all these years, approaches the effect of that first 1962 viewing.

It is rare that repeated watching of a film (as opposed to a live performance) does this, and the reasons go beyond the photography, performances and editing. In my opinion, it is because the characterisation and storytelling encourage an appreciation of the ambiguity and inconsistency behind our motives and behaviour, and, in a wartime scenario, in the contrast between political expedience and personal morality. For a 13-year old, this opened a window into the adult world, and it explains why the story has resonance far beyond its setting. The film doesn't require an understanding of middle-east politics (though it does have some very current relevance), but it does require an ability to look, listen and understand. The fact that so many people rate it so highly says everything about its wider impact. When The Matrix and even Lord of the Rings have slipped out of the ratings (and the adolescents who inhabit these pages have grown up), I believe this film will still be in the 20s or 30s, perhaps enabling young people to once again see the world through adult eyes.

Like Ali, I fear Lawrence. I fear the power of art to change us, to challenge our preconceptions. Every time I see this film I learn a little more, discover something new. When I was 13 I didn't understand much, but this film helped me to see that I wanted more, knew more, than my peers. I can't rate it more highly than that.


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