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A Very Modern Hero - Why 'Lawrence of Arabia' holds up so well.
National Review ^ | 6/27/2020 | Kyle Smith

Posted on 06/27/2020 12:09:19 PM PDT by Borges

H e did all right for himself, the fellow who got 15th billing in Lawrence of Arabia. After the names Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn, Jack Hawkins, Jose Ferrer, Anthony Quayle, Claude Rains, Arthur Kennedy, I. S. Johar, Gamil Ratib, Zia Mohyeddin, Michael Ray, John Dimech, Donald Wolfit and Omar Sharif, we are presented with this title: “Introducing Peter O’Toole as T. E. Lawrence.” Introducing? That’s the first clue that the film will prefer legend to fact. O’Toole wasn’t a neophyte, having had a major part in The Day They Robbed the Bank of England in 1960.

But what a beautiful legend it is. Allowances for changing tastes and styles must be made for many a film from decades past; that is not the case with Lawrence (streaming on the TCM app through tonight), which remains as invigorating as the night it was first shown, for the Queen, in 1962. Unlike, say, the Charlton Heston epics from the same period, it avoids camp and melodrama. There’s nothing to make a well-adjusted 21st-century viewer cringe (though a woke reading of the film would label it problematic for being a “white savior” narrative, missing the point as the woke tend to do). Lawrence is strikingly in tune with our times, with its early affinity for a self-constructed notion of identity, its admirable stance against racism, its white anxiety, its hints of sexual nonconformism, even its cosplay.

Beloved as the film may be to conservatives for its military derring-do, it is steeped in left-wing idealism. Both of its screenwriters had been Communists: Robert Bolt (whose credits include the play and film A Man for All Seasons) was, as Lawrence of Arabia went into pre-production, in jail in London for participating in one of those anti-NATO nuclear protests that thrilled ex- and not-so-ex-Communists. Michael Wilson, who wrote the earliest drafts of the script, never saw his name appear in the movie’s credits because he was blacklisted after refusing to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1951 about having joined the Communist Party at Berkeley in the 1930s. He was awarded the co-writing credit, and a posthumous Oscar nomination, in 1995, 17 years after his death. Lawrence of Arabia could be remade as a tale of the Russian Revolution — and was, in 1981: Warren Beatty’s Reds.

A strikingly modern trait of Lawrence is that it explores Thomas Edward Lawrence’s flaws and complicating aspects to a degree that was unusual for a Hollywood hero story then and for many years thereafter; even two decades later, its Columbia Pictures successor Gandhi was a strict hagiography that allowed no blemishes in its portrait (and suffers for it). Lawrence repeatedly casts its title character as vainglorious, dancing around admiring himself when he gets his splendid white sherif’s robes and twice comparing himself to Moses before he grants himself a promotion: “My friends, who will walk on water with me?” He’s not even 30 yet. Typical of a modern liberal intellectual, he is an internationalist, disdainful of his own country: He dubs England “fat country. Fat people,” anticipating how generations of Western students would talk as they roamed the earth looking for exotic folks to save, often begging to be accepted as one of them. “I’m different,” he says, and so he is. He’s a man with “a funny sense of fun,” we are told. That’s a genteel Edwardian reference to what we will observe is Lawrence’s sadomasochism.

Lawrence thinks it would be fun to lead the Arabs to seize the port of Aqaba from the Turks not for honor, adventure, or country, as in previous war epics, but as an act of allyship for people of color. His motive is to win the Arabs their independence in a pan-Arab postcolonial state. Underlying that is a semi-erotic fixation on pain, both receiving it and administering it. Prince Faisal (Alec Guinness) has his number: He’s seen misery tourists before. “No Arab loves the desert,” Faisal reminds him. Arabs aren’t stupid. They like water and green things, not deprivation. Lawrence is irritated by comfort. When he is captured and whipped by the Turks, he barely reacts, though immediately after that scene he expresses dismay about his skin color, which strikes him as hopelessly limiting rather than, like other British soldiers of the Empire, a mark of superiority.

Though the film may appear at first to be a rousing illustration of the great-man theory of history that tends to stir the conservative imagination, that interpretation doesn’t prevail. Lawrence may be a nobody who almost single-handedly turns the tides against the Ottoman Empire in the Mideast, but from Lawrence’s perspective, he’s a total failure, unable to get the Arabs even to unite, much less to eject the European empires. He simply assists the Arabs in trading their Turkish masters for the French and the British. He’s a victim of his own willful naïveté in believing the promises of the (fictitious) diplomat Dryden (Claude Rains) that the British have no designs on postwar Arabia. Late in the film, Dryden admits he simply lied to Lawrence but notes that Lawrence half-lied to the Arabs by promising them the independence he must have sensed he could not deliver. Dryden’s cynical realpolitik is a devastating rebuke to Lawrence’s idealism: “A man who tells lies, like me, merely hides the truth. But a man who tells half-lies has forgotten where he put it.”

Even Lawrence’s most inspiring, lapidary credo — “Nothing is written!”— disintegrates in the harsh light of events. That proud affirmation of man’s power to make his own history refers to Lawrence’s spectacularly heroic and successful effort to save the life of an Arab, Gasim (I. S. Johar), who has gotten lost in the desert. Yet Gasim’s fate is to be executed by Lawrence himself, for committing murder in a tribal feud. An observer notes dryly of Gasim’s harsh death, “It was written, then.”

Lawrence of Arabia is a tale of how an amazingly doughty and resourceful British soldier becomes a hero for the ages while accomplishing, by his lights, nothing. His fate is not even to earn a tragic death, much less a glorious one; instead of being killed in battle like Admiral Nelson or General Gordon of Khartoum, he loses his life embarrassingly, in a motorcycle accident. That detail, too, is consonant with a modern view of heroes, as well as a modernist one. Lawrence’s ending evokes the words of another Thomas, T. S. Eliot, born the same year he was, in 1888. Lawrence expires not with a bang but a whimper.


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: movies
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1 posted on 06/27/2020 12:09:19 PM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges

You knew this was coming....

Lawrence, Lawrence of Arabia
He was an English guy
He came to fight the Turkish....(BEEP BEEP!)


2 posted on 06/27/2020 12:10:20 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Borges
He didn't mention what would really make modern Wokes scream...Alec Guinness playing Faisal of Iraq...


3 posted on 06/27/2020 12:12:50 PM PDT by Borges
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To: dfwgator

I just watched it for the first time last month. I found Peter O’Toole’s beauty distracting to the story.


4 posted on 06/27/2020 12:13:20 PM PDT by Hildy (Don't get bitter, get better.)
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To: dfwgator

Great film, in many ways (direction, script, acting, etc.)

But already criticized for its depiction of Arabs. Expect it to meet the fate of GWTW — and have a “preface” of some sort to explain it to us children.


5 posted on 06/27/2020 12:14:15 PM PDT by CondorFlight
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To: CondorFlight

Also from the contemporary point of view...it obviously takes the side of the British but the rise of Arab nationalism has been an utter disaster. The Turkey of Ataturk was the side to root for there.


6 posted on 06/27/2020 12:15:48 PM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges
Lawrence repeatedly casts its title character as vainglorious, dancing around admiring himself when he gets his splendid white sherif’s robes and twice comparing himself to Moses before he grants himself a promotion: “My friends, who will walk on water with me?”

Yeah, Moses? I don't think so.

Lawrence of Arabia is a tale of how an amazingly doughty and resourceful British soldier becomes a hero for the ages while accomplishing, by his lights, nothing.

He created a bunch of terrorist states. Not exactly nothing but a realist would not judge that accomplishment as "heroic".

I am sure he would be very proud though.

7 posted on 06/27/2020 12:16:12 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Leave it to me to be holdin' the matches when the fire truck shows up & there's nobody else to blame)
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To: Borges

He was a boy raping adrenaline junky bisexual, like his Arab pals. And he’s given credit for a lot of stuff actually done by Gertrude Bell.


8 posted on 06/27/2020 12:18:59 PM PDT by jjotto (“Blessed are You LORD, who crushes enemies and subdues the wicked.”)
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To: Borges
Also from the contemporary point of view...it obviously takes the side of the British but the rise of Arab nationalism has been an utter disaster. The Turkey of Ataturk was the side to root for there.

Of course, though, the Soviet Union, would have gotten involved there too, and tried to appeal to the Arabs. You never know how these things would have turned out.

9 posted on 06/27/2020 12:19:03 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Borges
The best scene is when the ferals gather to split up the spoils causing Lawrence to have his breakdown and leave Araby.

Proof that you could confiscate every trillion and distribute it evenly, and in a year or two everything would be right back where it was. Ferals are just no damn good.

10 posted on 06/27/2020 12:27:37 PM PDT by StAnDeliver (I don't owe you my freedom.)
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To: Borges

I saw the film in 1963 at the Carthay Circle Theater in Los Angeles, which was where many Hollywood blockbusters were first shown. Sadly, the theater was razed in 1969.


11 posted on 06/27/2020 12:33:38 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Borges

The motorcycle crash scene was very well done. I have been in a few myself, and the loss of control and the “shimmy” are very true to life.

Luckily, I was wearing my helmet! Unlike some people I could mention.


12 posted on 06/27/2020 12:33:42 PM PDT by left that other site (If you do not stand firm in your faith, you will not stand at all. (Isaiah 7:9))
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To: Borges
Also from the contemporary point of view...it obviously takes the side of the British but the rise of Arab nationalism has been an utter disaster. The Turkey of Ataturk was the side to root for there.

The British always used a divide and conquer strategy to control their empires (or areas they hoped to make part of their empire). They played a similar game in India by playing Muslims and Hindus against each other.

The disaster that you speak of is due to the fact that "Arab nationalism" never really worked - Arabs tend think in terms of tribal and sectarian identity, not national or even ethnic identity.

In the short term, the strategy worked very well for the British, because they could claim to be coming in to maintain order. Once they left, you have a powderkeg ready to blow.

13 posted on 06/27/2020 12:34:08 PM PDT by ek_hornbeck
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To: Borges

The scene at Ali’s well is legendary and very well done. Best on the big screen, of course.


14 posted on 06/27/2020 12:34:28 PM PDT by dainbramaged (That information is classified. Request denied.)
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To: left that other site

I remember when I took a class about Film, we spent a whole lecture talking about that scene.


15 posted on 06/27/2020 12:35:03 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Borges
For some reason Alec Guinness was often cast in non-European roles: among others, he also played the eccentric Brahmin professor in A Passage to India and was almost given the role of Gandhi before Ben Kingsley (real name = Krishna Bhanji) came along.
16 posted on 06/27/2020 12:35:59 PM PDT by ek_hornbeck
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To: Borges
Why 'Lawrence of Arabia' holds up so well.

Great soundtrack and cinematography.
17 posted on 06/27/2020 12:36:51 PM PDT by AnotherUnixGeek
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To: AnotherUnixGeek

Dr. Zhivago was better, IMHO. And it also provides a warning from history.


18 posted on 06/27/2020 12:37:20 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator

The rider’s-eye-view is what makes it happen. Also the alternating light and shade, which can affect visibility.

I never went to film school, but I’ve been riding for 47 years on 5 different bikes. The one I have now (a 93FXR) has been my ride for 27 years.

Here’s the scene, for old times sake:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzPr3R3DNoo


19 posted on 06/27/2020 12:43:14 PM PDT by left that other site (If you do not stand firm in your faith, you will not stand at all. (Isaiah 7:9))
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To: dfwgator

I watched Zhivago recently and it’s hard to sit through. A complete gloss of serious subject matter and terrible acting from the two leads.


20 posted on 06/27/2020 12:44:05 PM PDT by Borges
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