1
If he is a homosexual, Lawrence would be humiliated at the end, and he was almost exploded by a Turkish officer. But he seemed to enjoy it.
The film is too much to watch: Korda wanted Lawrence Oliver to play this film in 38 years, but it failed. The sculpture in St Paul's Cathedral was made by Kennington in 1935, his good friend. Lawrence was originally in Arabia as an archaeology student at Oxford University.
Jerre: Originally, Arnold and Walton were invited to compose the music, but they didn't like the movie. Jerre was ordered to sleep for 6 weeks and slept two hours a day to complete the work.
Ali, Dryden, and Colonel Brighton (prototype is Lt. Colonel Stewart F. Newcombe) are fictional characters. The capture city of Akbar fortress. Also seriously misrepresented.
Dryden's prototype is Sir Stoles. Sir Ronald Storrs is an intelligence officer. Lawrence traveled to Hejaz for the first time to meet with the Arab army, and somewhat reluctantly appointed Lawrence as a liaison. He later became the governor of Jerusalem. 2. Lawrence’s archaeologist friend DG Hogarth, who is also an intelligence officer; Egyptian High Commissioner Henry McMahon, whose negotiations effectively triggered the McMahon-Hussein correspondence of the Arab rebellion; and Mark Sykes, who helped draft the Sykes-Picot agreement , The agreement was divided between Britain and France in the post-war Middle East. Lawrence’s official biographer, Jeremy Wilson, described Sykes as “ambitious... able to manipulate completely cynically, when this will achieve some kind of short-term goal, similar to the fictional Dreyer in the movie pause.
Sorry, I have spit so much here, and spoiled so much. Let's enter the topic-Lawrence Geography:
The attack on Aqaba was reconstructed in a dried river bed in Playa del Algarrobico, southern Spain (at 37°1′25″N 1°52′53″W). Akbar's attack was seriously distorted. It is located east of Cairo (Akaba in blue pen), you can see it.
I drew a map myself to help everyone understand:
The starting point is Cairo on the left side of the map, where Lawrence serves as the starting point for trainees and intelligence personnel.
In the lower right corner, near Medina, is where he meets the prince. It is also where he spent a lot of writing talking about Akbar's surprise attack, the climax of the upper half. The upper right corner of the map is the main place in the lower half. Mann is where they exploded the train, which was 1917. Go further north, where Lawrence was humiliated. Further north is Damascus.
This picture basically includes all the geography involved in the movie. The red color is the part of the movie performance.
2
The guide said he was a Bedouin, more accurately he was Hazimi of Beni Salem.
The Arabs attach great importance to the agal on the headscarf, just like Confucius and the others. Only gentlemen have the ability to maintain it.
It should be said that this movie was only approved by Lawrence's brother, and some of the contents of "Seven Pillars of Wisdom" were put into a fictional movie, and many of the contents were artistically processed. For example, the deaths of the two servants of Lawrence, Daud and Farraj, are not the same as those in the movie. They did not go into quicksand or were killed by a detonator. The American journalist Lowell, who made Lawrence world-famous, also changed his name to Bentley, and did not film him on the train. He was also at the beginning of the movie, showing the most controversial commentator on Lawrence.
What's more important is that the turning point of Lawrence's psychopathy is Deraa. He was almost seduced by the Turkish officer Bey, so he couldn't accept it in his heart. The movie only shows that he was whipped. This is of course because the British have no sexual taboos. As long as the producer Sam is dissatisfied, he will perform heart failure, and David is too scared to give in.
3
Watching a Blu-ray disc is to look at the details.
In Hu Weita's tent, you can feel the tension of his female relatives, peeping into the world of men, whether they are married or not. A silver ring on Oda's little finger, and ostrich feathers on the horse's forehead. In Wadi Shafra, the family members of Prince Fesso can also clearly see the simple tent set up on the camel, with their braceleted hands stretched out. Towards the last scene, the woman who killed the Talar tribe can also be seen.
Oda has always been poor. In fact, it was because the others were too generous. According to historical records, he slaughtered all his 50 sheep just the first time he treated Lawrence. He actually wanted to beat the Turks a long time ago, not as twitchy as shown in the film.
When grabbing the train in the lower half, the three Arabs put the silver pot they grabbed on their heads as helmets. Lawrence was not attacked by the Turks at all. Ali's black bodyguard. Goodyear, Rolls Royce written on the tires of Lawrence Special Purpose Vehicles.
General Allenby’s desk lamp in Cairo is decorated with Egyptian murals, two chest pockets and red epaulettes on their 1900 military uniforms. Pink Damascus rose on the Turkish General's table. It's sad, Turks are so childish.
During the first half of the reporting period, at the British headquarters in Spain and the second half in the so-called Jerusalem, the walls were covered with mosaics. That was an invention of the Arabs. The Plaza de España, Sevilleappeared as Britain's Egyptian Expeditionary Force Headquarters in Cairo, which included the officers' club.
Lawrence thought that when ordinary people's attempts failed and he returned to the battlefield, the American reporter was sitting in a small truck with Greek bread.
At the end of the international conference, Lawrence knocked the tabletop with a gun. There was Turkish celadon on it and a small lid. It should be kept in the Topkapi Palace. What General Allenby actually read on the table was The Complete Fishing Book, and I have a copy of this book.
4
This is the only movie in the world that allows you to understand the desert.
The playwrights Bolt and David Lean are good at one thing, creating mysterious events.
Lawrence also brought countless stories, inexplicable controversies, and eternal freezes.
This is the tragic life of a homosexual. We sympathize with him, who taught him to be born in Great Britain?
View more about Lawrence of Arabia reviews