Daily Archives: November 21, 2013

Lawrence of Arabia (1962)

Lawrence of ArabiaLawrence of Arabia poster
Directed by David Lean
Written by Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson based on the writings of T.E. Lawrence
1962/UK/USA
Columbia Pictures/Horizon Pictures

Repeat viewing
#404 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMdB users say 8.4/10; I say 9/10

 

Jackson Bentley: What is it, Major Lawrence, that attracts you personally to the desert?T.E. Lawrence: It’s clean.

Although epics are not my cup of tea, I make a giant exception for Lawrence of Arabia.

This is the dramatized story of T.E. Lawrence, who served in the British army as a liaison with the Arabs during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign and the Arab Revolt against Ottoman Turkish rule of 1916–18.

Lawrence (Peter O’Toole) is an undisciplined and slightly off-kilter officer who is selected by Mr. Dryden (Claude Rains) of the Foreign Office to gather intelligence from Prince Faisal (Alec Guinness) , the leader of a prominent Bedouin tribe, due to his prior travels in the Middle East and knowledge of Arabic.  He almost immediately goes native, advising Faisal contrary to the orders and conventional wisdom of his British military superiors. Through his understanding and love of the Arabs, Lawrence wins their trust despite some initial friction with Faisal’s son, Ali (Omar Sharif).

lawrence-of-arabia 2

Lawrence devises a daring plan to take the Turkish-held stronghold of Aqaba with a small contingent of Faisal’s men.  In the desert, he manages to attract the support of Auda abu Tayi (Anthony Quinn) and his tribe against the Turks.  The victory at Aqaba makes Lawrence a hero to the Arabs.  Already almost mystically over-confident, Lawrence begins to believe his own P.R.  Then, he is forced to execute a man to mediate a dispute between tribes and returns to Cairo to inform the British of the victory.  On the way, one of his young servants dies horribly in quicksand.  Both these deaths are huge blows to Lawrence.

lawrence_of_arabia 3

In Cairo, Lawrence asks to be relieved of his role but General Allenby (Jack Hawkins) will have none of it.  Lawrence asks Allenby for assurance that the British have no imperial ambitions in Arabia and Allenby falsely gives them.  Lawrence returns to the desert to lead the Arab armies in support of British troops.  After a series of successful skirmishes with the Turks, Lawrence is captured in Daara and severely beaten.  He manages to disguise his identity so is eventually released.  The trauma of this encounter sends him right over the edge and from then on Arab battles with the Turks become increasingly savage.

Eventually, the Arabs manage to take Damascus before the British can and Lawrence helps them set up an Arab Council to rule the city.  This results in chaos, however, because the Arabs are ill-equipped to cope with the necessities of modern life such as electricity, water, telephones, etc.  The practical Prince Faisal arrives to take charge in cooperation with the British and Lawrence is sent packing.  (Faisal goes on to found the Hashemite dynasty, which still reigns in Jordan.)

Lawrence of Arabia 4

Lawrence of Arabia has all the splendor of an epic with its magnificent score, gorgeous desert vistas, and thousands of extras marching into battle.  It is much more than that because of the complex portrayal of Lawrence by the screenwriters, director, and newcomer Peter O’Toole.  Those hypnotic blue eyes perfectly capture the blend of messianic lunacy and steely determination that was Lawrence.  The rest of the distinguished British cast also excels.  This is genuinely a film that should not be missed.

The film is filled with second choices in the casting of the roles.  How lucky we are that Lean settled on the cast we see.  Lawrence of Arabia won seven Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Color Cinematography (Freddie Young), Best Color Art Direction, Best Sound, Best Film Editing and Best Score (Maurice Jarre).  It was nominated for an additional three Oscars: Best Actor (O’Toole), Best Supporting Actor (Sharif) and Best Adapted Screenplay.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQA_ldX0VI0

Trailer

 

Boys Town (1938)

Boys Town
Directed by Norman Taurog
Written by John Meehan and Dore Shary from a story by Shary and Eleanore Griffin
1938/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Repeat viewing

 

[box] Father Edward J. Flanagan: I know that a mother can take a whip to the toughest boy in the world, and he forgets it because he knows that she loves him.[/box]

More evidence of what a great screen actor Spencer Tracy was.

This is an MGM dramatization of the life and work of Father Flanagan, the priest who founded Boys Town, a community for underprivileged and delinquent boys in Nebraska.

Flanagan (Tracy) receives his calling to help boys when he counsels a convict just before his execution and learns of his childhood as a homeless orphan on the city streets.  The priest proves to be a mastermind at raising money from reluctant donors and goes from a small home for boys in the city to a large farm in the country.  There the boys have their own town government with a youth mayor, council, and court.   These prove to be at least as stringent as the priest would have been.

Flanagan faces his biggest challenge when a convict asks him to take charge of his younger brother, Whitey Moran (Mickey Rooney).  Whitey is cocky in the extreme and resists all efforts to civilize him.  Finally, Whitey’s behavior threatens to ruin Boys Town’s perfect record and turn the public and financiers against it.

The plot sounds a bit maudlin but Tracy invests Flanagan with so much humor and grace that the movie is irresistible.  To see him discourage the condemned man from taking a drink with just the slightest cock of his head was worth the price of admission to me. Tracy’s priest is light years away from Pat O’Brien’s pontificating prelate in Angels with Dirty Faces.  You can see why the boys would follow him anywhere.  This may also be Mickey Rooney’s best work.  It is too bad he did not do more drama in his youth.

One of my very earliest film-watching memories is sobbing near the end of this picture and my mother telling me that if I was going to get so upset I would have to stop watching movies.  Obviously, that didn’t happen!

Spencer Tracy won his second consecutive Best Actor Oscar for Boys Town and Griffin and Shary won an award for their original story.  The film was nominated for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Writing, Screenplay.

Trailer (spoilers)