LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (DVD/WS 2.20/DD 5.1/ENG-FR-SP-PThere’s no getting around a simple, basic truth: watching Lawrence of Arabia in any home-video format represents a compromise. There’s no better way to appreciate this epic biographical adventure than to see it projected in 70 millimeter onto a huge theater screen. That caveat aside, David Lean’s masterful “desert classic” is still enjoyable on the small screen, especially if viewed in widescreen format. (If your only option is to view a “pan & scan” version, it’s best not to bother; this is a film for which the widescreen format is utterly mandatory.) Peter O’Toole gives a star-making performance as T.E. Lawrence, the eccentric British officer who united the desert tribes of Arabia against the Turks during World War I. Lean orchestrates sweeping battle sequences and breathtaking action, but the film is really about the adventures and trials that transform Lawrence into a legendary man of the desert. Lean traces this transformation on a vast canvas of awesome physicality; no other movie has captured the expanse of the desert with such scope and grandeur. Equally important is the psychology of Lawrence, who remains an enigma even as we grasp his identification with the desert. Perhaps the greatest triumph of this landmark film is that Lean has conveyed the romance, danger, and allure of the desert with such physical and emotional power. It’s a film about a man who leads one life but is irresistibly drawn to another, where his greatness and mystery are allowed to flourish in equal measure. –Jeff Shannon
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March 18, 2008
#1
I bought this DVD as a way to show off my new DVD player to my family. I had seen the movie several times in the theater, and knew its bright colors would be beautiful on my TV screen.
To my horror, I saw that Columbia had seen fit to alter a masterpiece. Yes, the film came complete with those horrific black bars at the top and bottom of my screen, which obscured about half of the picture. I’ve seen those bars on the “artsy” videos on TV, and I sometimes enjoy them. But this is a classic work of art! You don’t try to make it “hip” and “relevant” with modern touches. It would be like adding a moustache to the Mona Lisa.
Until Columbia drops the act and releases “Lawrence of Arabia” without those bars, letting us see all of the picture, stay away.
March 18, 2008
#2
I am used to seeing movies with fast action or at least a good story. This movie has neither. Some british guy goes to the mideast and fights with turks. The screenplay never explains why he would do that. At least the writer who wrote this uninteresting piece of fiction could have created a plausible story. The movie is so slow moving and dull that I fell asleep.
March 18, 2008
#3
WERE THERE NO OTHER MOTION PICTURES MADE IN 1962? HOW ON EARTH THIS WON BEST PICTURE IS BEYOND ME. WHAT WAS RUNNER-UP “WATCHING PAINT DRY”? THIS MOVIE WAS TERRIBLE AND SHOULD NEVER BE LISTED WITH THE CLASSICS! DO NOT BUY THIS MOVIE.
March 18, 2008
#4
Undeniably, the most boring film, other than Quest for Fire, that I have ever sat through. I know it has a loyal following and it’s eluded me as to why. A terrific cast, wasted in the wasteland. For 3+ hours we see the camels lope across the desert this way, and then back the other way. It was painful to watch such beautiful scenery and great talent stagnating in a celluloid farce.
March 18, 2008
#5
A 90-minute story in a 220 minute marathon of tedium. Easily the most boring movie of all time.