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Lawrence of Arabia
Lawrence of Arabia
During World War I, English officer Thomas Edward 'T.E.' Lawrence sets out to unite and lead the diverse, often warring, Arab tribes to fight the Turks.
rating
8
runtime
228 min

Release

1962-12-11

Cast

Peter O'Toole
Peter O'Toole
as T.E. Lawrence
Alec Guinness
Alec Guinness
as Prince Feisal
Omar Sharif
Omar Sharif
as Sherif Ali
Anthony Quinn
Anthony Quinn
as Auda abu Tayi
Jack Hawkins
Jack Hawkins
as General Allenby
José Ferrer
José Ferrer
as Turkish Bey
Anthony Quayle
Anthony Quayle
as Colonel Harry Brighton
Claude Rains
Claude Rains
as Mr. Dryden
Arthur Kennedy
Arthur Kennedy
as Jackson Bentley
Donald Wolfit
Donald Wolfit
as General Murray
I.S. Johar
I.S. Johar
as Gasim
Gamil Ratib
Gamil Ratib
as Majid
Michel Ray
Michel Ray
as Farraj
John Dimech
John Dimech
as Daud
Zia Mohyeddin
Zia Mohyeddin
as Tafas
Howard Marion-Crawford
Howard Marion-Crawford
as Medical Officer
Jack Gwillim
Jack Gwillim
as Club Secretary
Hugh Miller
Hugh Miller
as R.A.M.C. Colonel
John Barry
John Barry
as MP in Map Room (uncredited)
Bruce Beeby
Bruce Beeby
as Captain at Officer's Club (uncredited)
Fred Bennett
Fred Bennett
as Sergeant at Cairo Headquarters (uncredited)
John Bennett
John Bennett
as Arab Sheik (uncredited)
Steve Birtles
Steve Birtles
as Motor Bike Rider (uncredited)
Robert Bolt
Robert Bolt
as Officer with Pipe Gazing at Lawrence (uncredited)
Peter Burton
Peter Burton
as Damascus Sheik (uncredited)
J.R.M. Chapman
J.R.M. Chapman
as Extra (uncredited)
Barbara Cole
Barbara Cole
as Nurse (uncredited)
Basil Dignam
Basil Dignam
as Cavalry General at Field Briefing (uncredited)
Peter Dukelow
Peter Dukelow
as Driver in Cairo (uncredited)
Mohamed El Habachi
Mohamed El Habachi
as Talal (uncredited)
Kenneth Fortescue
Kenneth Fortescue
as Allenby's Aide (uncredited)
Harry Fowler
Harry Fowler
as William Potter (uncredited)
James Hayter
James Hayter
as Sheik in Arab Council (uncredited)
Jack Hedley
Jack Hedley
as Reporter (uncredited)
Rafael Hernández
Rafael Hernández
as Turkish Soldier (uncredited)
Noel Howlett
Noel Howlett
as Vicar at St. Paul's (uncredited)
Patrick Kavanagh
Patrick Kavanagh
as Staff Major - Murray's Aide (uncredited)
David Lean
David Lean
as Motorcyclist by Suez Canal (uncredited)
Ian MacNaughton
Ian MacNaughton
as Michael George Hartley (uncredited)
Clive Morton
Clive Morton
as Artillery General at Field Briefing (uncredited)
Daniel Moynihan
Daniel Moynihan
as Officer in Officer's Club (uncredited)
Henry Oscar
Henry Oscar
as Silliam (uncredited)
George Plimpton
George Plimpton
as Bedouin (uncredited)
Bryan Pringle
Bryan Pringle
as Driver (uncredited)
Ernie Rice
Ernie Rice
as Mourner (uncredited)
Robert Rietti
Robert Rietti
as Majid (voice) (uncredited)
John Robinson
John Robinson
as Infantry General at Field Briefing (uncredited)
Norman Rossington
Norman Rossington
as Corporal Jenkins (uncredited)
John Ruddock
John Ruddock
as Elder Harith (uncredited)
Fernando Sancho
Fernando Sancho
as Turkish Sergeant (uncredited)
Stuart Saunders
Stuart Saunders
as Regimental Sergeant Major (uncredited)
Cyril Shaps
Cyril Shaps
as Bartender in Officer's Club (uncredited)
Jack Sharp
Jack Sharp
as Mourner (uncredited)
George Spence
George Spence
as Mourner (uncredited)
Roy Stevens
Roy Stevens
as Truck Driver (uncredited)
Graham Tonbridge
Graham Tonbridge
as Mourner (uncredited)
Barry Warren
Barry Warren
as Arab Sheik (uncredited)

Director

REVIEWS
NA

narrator56

This is obviously an epic film, lasting nearly four hours with the wide, sweeping desert vistas and huge cast. It describes a fairly brief period of time out of a remarkable man’s life. I wonder how modern viewers handle the length of the movie, accustomed as they are to movies this lengthy featuring superheroes with humor and almost constant action. I don’t even remember how long ago I originally watched Lawrence of Arabia —quite possibly forty or more years ago. It has aged pretty well overall. The only negative thing that struck me when I recently re-watched it may well be due to my age. But it can be a talkative film at times, which is fine, but they sometimes talk fairly softly, and if such a scene transitions to music, I found the music to be so loud in comparison that it lifted me half of my chair. I had to have remote in hand to be ready to adjust the volume. A minor thing.

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r96sk

227 minutes of greatness! I've always wanted to watch <em>'Lawrence of Arabia'</em> given its standing as being one of the greats, though that rather long run time always put it on my subconscious back-burner. At last, I rooted out some time for it and man it was a well spent near four hours! I'm not going to say its length is ignorable, though it truly doesn't feel like a 3hr 47min movie - so every credit to all involved. Peter O'Toole's performance is undoubtedly outstanding, I can't really add anything more to what I'm sure many, many others have noted down the decades - he is, put simply, brilliant. Other strong performers are Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn, Omar Sharif and, albeit more minorly, Claude Rains. No-one on the cast puts a foot wrong, as expected. The cinematography throughout is also absolutely exquisite, the entire look and feel of the film is just stunning. There is much more to say about this but I'll leave that to those that have already said such things. I'm just here to watch great movies and this 1962 picture is unequivocally one of those. Quite evidently a classic, no doubt about it.

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Geronimo1967

This has got to be in my top ten movies - it is an almost flawless exercise in marrying fantastic photography, casting, writing, costumes and a score into three hours of wonderful entertainment. Rumour has it that Albert Finney was offered the lead role and suggested Peter O'Toole instead. If that is true (or not) then clearly serendipity was already on hand to guide this rendition of the story of TE Lawrence, who inspired and led an Arab uprising against the Ottoman empire. The iconic scene that introduces us to Omar Sharif as Lawrence heads to meet Prince Faisal (Alec Guinness) starts us on a journey mixing adventure, politics, superstition, ambition and cruelty. Anthony Quinn is superb as are, in lesser capacities, Claude Rains, José Ferrer and Jack Hawkins as his somewhat cynical, but opportunistic GOC. Arthur Kennedy helps take Lawrence's story to the world and through his eyes we see how his character is changed by all the violence around/instigated by him. Peter O'Toole conveys the emotional rollercoaster of a journey from naive, optimistic officer to war-weary veteran in a dazzling fashion. This is a true treat of a film.

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OrpheumFilms

Totally lives up to its reputation as a classic. A gripping story of a man that loses his soul that makes almost 4 hours seem like two, and with photography that hasn't aged whatsoever.