Lawrence of Arabia with Peter O'Toole: DVD Cover

    Lawrence of Arabia Director: David Lean Cast: Peter O'Toole, Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn, Jack Hawkins

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    • DVD Release Date: 08/27/2002
    • Original Release: 1962
    • Rating: Rated PG
    • Sales Rank: 2,305
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    Viewer Rating: (19 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Soundtrack" See All

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
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    Scenes

    Features

    This single-disc edition affords the film, without extras. Like the two-disc Special Edition, it affords digitally mastered audio and anamorphic video, with Dolby Digital 5.1 sound on the English soundtrack. For the two-disc Special Edition with additional features, please click "DVD - Wide Screen / Dolby 5.1" above.

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    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. Overture [6:10]
    2. Death of a Legend [3:19]
    3. On Staff, in Cairo [2:55]
    4. Dryden & Murray [1:51]
    5. A Chat With the General [2:07]
    6. "Find Prince Feisal" [1:17]
    7. The Desert Journey Begins [4:31]
    8. Friendship [4:28]
    9. Ali at the Well [10:01]
    10. Colonel Brighton [2:04]
    11. What Modern Weapons Do [5:00]
    12. In Feisal's Tent [5:38]
    13. "Time To Be Great Again" [2:53]
    14. "We Need a Miracle" [2:43]
    15. "The Nefud Cannot Be Crossed!" [1:19]
    16. "In Whose Name Do You Ride?" [2:38]
    17. At the Oasis [:26]
    18. "That Is the Railway" [1:50]
    19. "You Were Drifting" [1:42]
    20. Lost in the Desert [9:59]
    21. Rescue of Gasim [3:49]
    22. "Nothing is Written" [2:08]
    23. El Aurens [3:46]
    24. Robes of a Sharif [2:02]
    25. Auda aby Tayi & Son [2:39]
    26. Ali Vs. Auda [2:07]
    27. "Dine With Me at Wadi Rum!" [5:34]
    28. Execution of Gasim [7:55]
    29. Attack on Akaba [3:38]
    30. "The Miracle Is Accomplished" [2:25]
    31. No Gold in Akaba [3:13]
    32. Quicksand [4:23]
    33. Suez Canal [:40]
    34. The Officers' Bar [3:13]
    35. General Allenby [3:01]
    36. Planning the Campaign [4:10]
    37. Entr'acte [6:37]
    38. Jackson Bently, Journalist [4:47]
    39. Destroying the Turkish Railway [4:19]
    40. "It's Clean" [6:24]
    41. Something Honorable [7:28]
    42. Detonator [1:52]
    43. Capture in Deraa [4:09]
    44. "Beat Him" [6:32]
    45. "Sleep... Eat" [1:02]
    46. "Any Man Is What I Am" [4:43]
    47. Entering Jerusalem [3:02]
    48. A Clash of Temperment [:58]
    49. Bodyguard [2:23]
    50. British Staff Meeting [3:05]
    51. Roads to Damascus [5:28]
    52. "No Prisoners!" [3:22]
    53. Chaos in Damascus [:59]
    54. Turkish Hospital [2:52]
    55. Going Home [9:26]
    56. End Credits & Exit Music [8:27]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Decades after its initial theatrical release, Lawrence of Arabia remains the quintessential movie epic: lavish, sweeping, and literate, played against a grand historical backdrop and peopled with sharply drawn characters. The Academy Award winner for Best Picture in 1962, it also earned an Oscar for director David Lean (The Bridge on the River Kwai), whose command of filmmaking technique was never more aptly demonstrated. Peter O’Toole achieved international stardom following his portrayal of T. E. Lawrence, the enigmatic British intelligence officer who participated in a 1916 Arab revolt against Turkish oppressors and became a legendary figure throughout the Middle East. The arduous desert campaign is detailed with scope and style, and though Lean and screenwriter Robert Bolt never quite get a handle on their charismatic but cryptic protagonist, they limn memorable secondary characters like Omar Sharif’s fiery rebel chieftain, Alec Guinness’s crafty Arab prince, and Jack Hawkins’s stolid British general. A meticulously crafted film, truly a feast for the eyes and ears, Lawrence of Arabia is also a rousing adventure guaranteed to stir the emotions. The long-awaited DVD version is newly remastered from fully restored film elements and includes four Lawrence featurettes in addition to original newsreel footage of Lawrence himself, as well as a conversation with director and Lawrence fan Steven Spielberg. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    Classic movie that keeps you watching throughout. What a great cast of actors; all who went on to stby TomZap

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    August 01, 2009: The music, the setting, the story line and the acting all make this film one of the all time greats. One that needs to be in everyones library of films. Hollywood just does not make movies like this anymore.

    I Also Recommend: The Bridge on the River Kwai, Doctor Zhivago.

    An outstanding epicby CardinalBiggles

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    May 16, 2009: I was surprised to realize that I'd never watched David Lean's 1962 epic "Lawrence of Arabia." It was well worth the wait. At once a huge story of international politics and the British-backed Arabian fight for freedom from the Ottoman Empire, it's also an intensely personal story of one man's journey from nobody to historic figure, and how it almost breaks him.

    Peter O'Toole is brilliant as the enigmatic T.E. Lawrence, but I actually found myself drawn more to the supporting characters -- Sherif Ali (Omar Sharif), Auda Abu Tayi (Anthony Quinn), and Prince Feisal (the chameleonlike Alec Guinness). Beautifully filmed, and with one of the most memorable film scores of all time, "Lawrence" really lives up to the adjective "masterpiece." My only regret is that I don't have a larger TV screen on which to appreciate the stunning visuals.

    This review was written about the DVD Wide Screen edition.

    I Also Recommend: Ben-Hur, Patton.


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