Lawrence and Feisal go to argue for Arab independence at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference.Lawrence and Feisal go to argue for Arab independence at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference.Lawrence and Feisal go to argue for Arab independence at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference.
Alexander Siddig
- Feisal
- (as Siddig El Fadil)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
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Call me an elitist if you like, but this film is not for the general public; it is for the erudite, educated and well-informed only. All others will be hopelessly lost in an ocean of Western and Eastern stereotypes and suppositions. I enjoyed this triumphant tragedy more than most; of that I have no doubt. I have my own copy of "The Seven Pillars of Wisdom", the masterpiece of T. E. Lawrence's life's work. I found the age differential between the original film masterpiece character of Prince Feisal (played by a middle-aged Alec Guinness) and the young Prince Feisal of this film to be slightly disconcerting, but something that, ultimately, the viewer can overlook. Ralph Fiennes is, of course, superb; as is all of the supporting cast. I did not care much for the ending, which I will not reveal, but that too did not affect the overall tenor of the film. If you enjoyed the prequel, you will most likely enjoy the sequel; despite the absence of special effects, a cast of thousands, and an epic budget. This is a thinking man's film, and not one to be enjoyed by someone looking for eye candy. Anyone who does not appreciate the content of this film would be, in my opinion, be ignorant and ill-informed. So to all those romantics out there who love T. E. Lawrence; enjoy every minute.
Interesting, but also uninteresting.
The key plotlines of 'A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia', an "unofficial sequel" to that 1962 movie, are actually fairly intriguing, though it's all kinda presented via quite underwhelming means. My personal interest in events onscreen dipped and piqued fairly often. A trimmed run time would've helped, I'd imagine.
On the cast, a debuting Ralph Fiennes makes for a solid Lawrence, though that is not a surprise given he is an excellent actor. Alexander Siddig (aka Siddig El Fadil, also basically debuting) is another noteworthy name, though I feel like he would've made a better Sherif Ali (not that he appears here) rather than Prince Faisal - Siddig is good, all the same.
The key plotlines of 'A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia', an "unofficial sequel" to that 1962 movie, are actually fairly intriguing, though it's all kinda presented via quite underwhelming means. My personal interest in events onscreen dipped and piqued fairly often. A trimmed run time would've helped, I'd imagine.
On the cast, a debuting Ralph Fiennes makes for a solid Lawrence, though that is not a surprise given he is an excellent actor. Alexander Siddig (aka Siddig El Fadil, also basically debuting) is another noteworthy name, though I feel like he would've made a better Sherif Ali (not that he appears here) rather than Prince Faisal - Siddig is good, all the same.
If you're like me, the film LAWRENCE OF ARABIA always leaves you hungering for more viewing material about T.E. Lawrence. Since documentaries sadly don't seem to appeal to all tastes this outstanding telefilm may satisfy your apetite. The movie deals with Lawrence's activities at the Paris Peace Conference following World War One and the cast is wonderful. Appropriate for material based on real events the film avoids hype and melodrama, keeping the viewer riveted with it's mature, intelligent approach. No matter what your politics it's intriguing to watch this movie and reflect on "what might have been" regarding relations between the Western Democracies and the nations being formed from the remains of the Ottoman Empire. The closing scene between Lawrence and Feisal nicely summarizes the sense of a monumental lost opportunity.
Program this film as a second feature the next time you watch LAWRENCE OF ARABIA for a wonderful marathon viewing experience.
Program this film as a second feature the next time you watch LAWRENCE OF ARABIA for a wonderful marathon viewing experience.
Ralph Fiennes takes on the dangerous Peter O'Toole role of T. E. Lawrence in "A Dangerous Man," about Lawrence of Arabia, who knew his way around the desert in World War I, bewildered by red tape in the 1919 Paris Peace Conference that eventually helped give us World War II and possibly World War III (though the 1921 Cairo Conference actually divided the former Ottoman Empire into lines in the sand).
Notable are Denis Quiley as Lord Curzon and Michael Cochrane as Winston Churchill, though the whole cast is fine.
Don't think of this as a sequel to David Lean's masterpiece. In "Lawrence of Arabia" O'Toole played Lawrence as the tragic archetype of a liberator no longer needed once "his" chosen people had their freedom.
Fiennes' Lawrence is up against a worse adversary than the Ottoman Empire: entrenched bureaucracy (what today we call the swamp). British civil servants who probably spent their War years in Whitehall smugly do their best to hamper Lawrence's delegation and cut his legs off before his friends. All in the name of aiding the French.
The ins and outs of governmental duplicity (it existed on medieval China, the British Empire and modern America amongst these same breed of bureaucrats) are easy to follow as they do their best to sideline Lawrence and the Arabs as the British and the French gaily scheme.
This movie has a good cast but shares no production values with Lean's magnum opus. Consider them two separate types of beast.
BTW, it takes all the rumors of Lawrence's private life as gospel. That will fascinate rather than irritate the viewers it's most likely to attract.
Notable are Denis Quiley as Lord Curzon and Michael Cochrane as Winston Churchill, though the whole cast is fine.
Don't think of this as a sequel to David Lean's masterpiece. In "Lawrence of Arabia" O'Toole played Lawrence as the tragic archetype of a liberator no longer needed once "his" chosen people had their freedom.
Fiennes' Lawrence is up against a worse adversary than the Ottoman Empire: entrenched bureaucracy (what today we call the swamp). British civil servants who probably spent their War years in Whitehall smugly do their best to hamper Lawrence's delegation and cut his legs off before his friends. All in the name of aiding the French.
The ins and outs of governmental duplicity (it existed on medieval China, the British Empire and modern America amongst these same breed of bureaucrats) are easy to follow as they do their best to sideline Lawrence and the Arabs as the British and the French gaily scheme.
This movie has a good cast but shares no production values with Lean's magnum opus. Consider them two separate types of beast.
BTW, it takes all the rumors of Lawrence's private life as gospel. That will fascinate rather than irritate the viewers it's most likely to attract.
10cath-14
This is an excellent film dealing with Lawrence's struggle to fulfill his promise to the Arabs to allow them independant rule in their own land. Acting, directing, everything about this film is superb.
Did you know
- TriviaJoseph Fiennes, in his uncredited debut, plays brother Ralph Fiennes' character Lawrence's younger brother. He had to sneak out of school during a lunch break to play the bit-part.
- Quotes
T. E. Lawrence: All men dream; but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds Awake to find that it was vanity; But the dreamers of day are dangerous men. That they may act their dreams with open eyes to make it possible.
- ConnectionsEdited into Great Performances: A Dangerous Man: Lawrence After Arabia (1992)
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