I don’t think there was ever a more beautiful score for a film. So much grandeur and emotion. Fits so well with David Lean’s cinematography. Toss in a few incredible actors and you get one of the top five movies of all time. Amazing.
I agree! And for all that, it resists throwing in a lot of Hollywood Orientalist flourishes & corny ornamentation. It's grand & sweeping but with the restraint to let the melody breathe.
I'm trying to think of a single film before or since that had a combination of scenes and music which generated such a level of truly epic grandeur, and I can't think of a single one. In film history, this piece is the equivalent of Da Vinci's Last Supper or Michelangelo's ceiling work in the Sistine Chapel.
I remember this part of the film so well from when I first saw it on the big screen at the Metropol cinema, Victoria, in 1962 and have seen it many times since. The rising red orb of the sun and Maurice Jarre's magnificent score render the scene utterly unforgettable.
To anyone out there who likes the finest films but may not have seen this yet, I commend it, it is truly a masterpiece , wonderful acting and breathtaking craftsmanship from before the days of CGI. Watch it with patience in a room with subdued light to see the colours. I have seen the uncut version in a cinema in London.
I love how we don’t hear the main theme in the actual body of the film (outside of the credits) until Lawrence comes to the desert. The theme represents him as much as it represents the desert itself. It’s as if being in the desert has finally allowed his free spirit to break out of the cage in which British life imprisoned it.
Coming from the area and having worked at the tank base he was stationed at. Also Larks Hill where Lawrence retired too,both places have a very real connection with me,passing it everyday on my motorbike and being very careful on that road he came off his Brough Superior.The Film in every sense is a Lean Epic, one of the best films ever made and one I watch two or three times a year.
Hola Laurence de Arabia.buena pelicula. Nos hace ver el mund9 real.frente a la adversidad y la realidad que se vi4vio en esa epoca por Ingaleterra y sus colonias.
Chelsea dinorath... Cada vez mais admiro a melodia 🎶 do tom da tua voz em cada letra das tuas musicas... Muitos parabéns E que continues a proporcionar boas músicas como tens feito... Top 🔝 🔝 🔝 👏👏👏👏
Historical the movie is Bs lots of details didnt mentioned but beside that I have some notes why when they show arabia on screen its always plain desert with bedouine and camels and nothing else i mean we have cities (meccah medina jeddah riyadh abha sanaa aden taiz marib musqat )and all of them are old as time imagine just showing some farms and peasents riding donkeys milking cow and say thats europe secondly why didnt you bring an arab guy from arabia to teach how to wear our clothes or atleast some basics of our culture before making a movie about us beacause the actors looks funny they wear it wrong like everything in this movie is bull$hit the last thing why lawrence face is grey i know he is in the desert but come on grey😂
Because idiot, idk if you’ve ever been in a desert, but it’s extremely dry. There is NO humidity. All of the moisture evaporates off your body. So next time you feel like making a sarcastic comment, make sure it’s intelligent. Go learn something.
I lived in Osaka...29 C...I was drenched in my own juice going outside within 2 minutes. I lived in Sydney...41 C....I was dry as a bone. In a desert environment, sweat DOES something...it evaporates...drawing heat away from your body.
I don’t think there was ever a more beautiful score for a film. So much grandeur and emotion. Fits so well with David Lean’s cinematography. Toss in a few incredible actors and you get one of the top five movies of all time. Amazing.
I agree! And for all that, it resists throwing in a lot of Hollywood Orientalist flourishes & corny ornamentation. It's grand & sweeping but with the restraint to let the melody breathe.
Everything about that movie was fantastic
What a beautiful and great clip of Sir. Peter O'Toole and Sir. Zia Mohyeddin. Rest in peace.
This masterpiece has to be seen in a movie hall with a wide screen. It's mesmerizing!
This is wonderful, I find the music in this film to be one of the important characters!
Marvelous combination of David Lean's epic direction of broad vistas and Maurice Jarre's magnificent, vivid score.
I'm trying to think of a single film before or since that had a combination of scenes and music which generated such a level of truly epic grandeur, and I can't think of a single one.
In film history, this piece is the equivalent of Da Vinci's Last Supper or Michelangelo's ceiling work in the Sistine Chapel.
One of the greatest movies ever made with a star studed cast
I remember this part of the film so well from when I first saw it on the big screen at the Metropol cinema, Victoria, in 1962 and have seen it many times since. The rising red orb of the sun and Maurice Jarre's magnificent score render the scene utterly unforgettable.
To anyone out there who likes the finest films but may not have seen this yet, I commend it, it is truly a masterpiece , wonderful acting and breathtaking craftsmanship from before the days of CGI. Watch it with patience in a room with subdued light to see the colours. I have seen the uncut version in a cinema in London.
It's hard to believe that so many folks haven't seen the movie. Like you said, one's patience will be rewarded.
Really needs to be seen on a giant screen though for full effect!
@@cemonkey1 yes I was in a cinema, I could not agree more.
I love how we don’t hear the main theme in the actual body of the film (outside of the credits) until Lawrence comes to the desert. The theme represents him as much as it represents the desert itself. It’s as if being in the desert has finally allowed his free spirit to break out of the cage in which British life imprisoned it.
Coming from the area and having worked at the tank base he was stationed at. Also Larks Hill where Lawrence retired too,both places have a very real connection with me,passing it everyday on my motorbike and being very careful on that road he came off his Brough Superior.The Film in every sense is a Lean Epic, one of the best films ever made and one I watch two or three times a year.
Maravillosa película "Lawrence de Arabia"!!👍💖
Que impresionante esta película, la vi junto a mis padres en un cine que ya no existe , la tengo en DVD, para recordar esos bellos momentos .
The music !
Una scena superba!
Agree with the film score music appreciation!!
Una buena banda sonora es importantísima para dar calidad a una película.
Hola Laurence de Arabia.buena pelicula. Nos hace ver el mund9 real.frente a la adversidad y la realidad que se vi4vio en esa
epoca por Ingaleterra y sus colonias.
"Because it's clean."
WE'VE DONE IT THEN
Imagine on IMAX
Chelsea dinorath... Cada vez mais admiro a melodia 🎶 do tom da tua voz em cada letra das tuas musicas... Muitos parabéns
E que continues a proporcionar boas músicas como tens feito... Top 🔝 🔝 🔝 👏👏👏👏
Oh I feel sad for the camels😢
He was nothing! The well is everything!
Historical the movie is Bs lots of details didnt mentioned but beside that I have some notes why when they show arabia on screen its always plain desert with bedouine and camels and nothing else i mean we have cities (meccah medina jeddah riyadh abha sanaa aden taiz marib musqat )and all of them are old as time imagine just showing some farms and peasents riding donkeys milking cow and say thats europe secondly why didnt you bring an arab guy from arabia to teach how to wear our clothes or atleast some basics of our culture before making a movie about us beacause the actors looks funny they wear it wrong like everything in this movie is bull$hit the last thing why lawrence face is grey i know he is in the desert but come on grey😂
But they did their fighting near the desert alot...Did they not?
I'm impressed that they're
in the middle of a *cking
hot desert but they're not
sweating. 😏 🏜️
Because idiot, idk if you’ve ever been in a desert, but it’s extremely dry. There is NO humidity. All of the moisture evaporates off your body. So next time you feel like making a sarcastic comment, make sure it’s intelligent. Go learn something.
haha, humidity is what causes you to sweat. The north african desert is extremely dry.
I lived in Osaka...29 C...I was drenched in my own juice going outside within 2 minutes.
I lived in Sydney...41 C....I was dry as a bone.
In a desert environment, sweat DOES something...it evaporates...drawing heat away from your body.