| 32-34
Opening the Syrian campaign |
|
32
Akaba,
Jackson Bentley talks to Feisal
|
Invention, misleading dialogue
|
|
33
Blowing
up a train
|
Legitimate dramatisation from Seven Pillars
|
|
34
Looting
the wrecked train
|
•Lawrence's behaviour invented and most
improbable - warps TEL
|
32 Feisal and Jackson Bentley
at Akaba
Invented scene
-
Bentley tactlessly displays interest in Lawrence
rather than the Arab Revolt. He is 'looking for a hero'
-
The meeting is fictional and historically trivial.
Lowell Thomas visited Akaba for about a week in late-March 1918 That
was the only time he spent with the Arab Revolt. He met both Lawrence
and Feisal at Akaba. After Lawrence left, Thomas was taken to Guewira
then Petra
33 Blowing up a train
Splendid cowboy-and-Indian scene - based on accounts
in Seven Pillars
34 Looting
-
The Arabs loot the train, while Lawrence - here
portrayed strongly as an exhibitionist - parades pointlessly on the
roof. This is pure invention. No record suggests that he ever did
such a thing
-
A wounded Turk shoots at him repeatedly. Lawrence
stands still, letting him do it. Again, this is fiction. While Lawrence
in Seven Pillars speaks of facing with calm a situation where
there seemed to be no escape, in this situation he could easily have
avoided the danger
-
Ali and Brighton arrive. Brighton is appalled by
the looting, and points out that afterwards the Bedouin go home and
not return to fight. Soon there will be no force left. This is the
beginning of a new theme in Bolt's plot
-
Bentley asks if Lawrence is hurt. He replies. 'They
can only kill me with a golden bullet'
| 35-38 Observations and insinuations |
|
35
Bentley interviews Ali
|
Invention |
|
36
Bentley interviews Lawrence
|
Invention,
distorts TEL |
|
37
Auda’s quest for
honourable loot
|
Invention, but based loosely on the portrayal of Auda in
Seven Pillars |
|
38
The Arabs attack a second train
|
Invention which carries forward Bolt's mistaken themes |
These four scenes are all invented and all seem
relatively trivial, but they help Bolt build his dramatic
interpretation.
35 Ali and Bentley
Bentley interviews Ali, who talks naively about a
future democratic government.
36 Lawrence and Bentley
-
Bentley asks Lawrence, 'What do these people
hope to gain from this war?'
Lawrence replies: 'Their freedom'
Bentley comments 'There's one born every minute,' to
which Lawrence replies: 'They're going to get it, Mr Bentley. I'm
going to give it to them.'
-
Bolt's fictional Lawrence is now clearly deluded
about what he can deliver
37 Auda's loot
Auda surprises Brighton by expressing the hope of
finding some kind of loot that is 'honourable'. This adds a second
dimension to Auda's character.
38 The second train
-
The Arabs capture another train, carrying horses.
Auda is happy with this loot and goes home
-
Brighton asks Lawrence how he will campaign with
no forces
-
Lawrence replies 'I'll go north. That's what
Allenby wants, isn't it?'
-
Brighton: 'Allenby wanted the Arab Army behind
Deraa.'
-
Lawrence: 'Then that's where I'll take it. Tell
Allenby to hurry up . . . we'll be in Deraa before he's in Jerusalem...'
Bolt's combination of diminishing Arab forces and
Lawrence's alleged promise to Brighton sets up one of the most absurd
episodes in the film. But all this is fiction, not based
on Seven Pillars or any other historical source.
| 39-42 Deepening failure |
|
39
Death
of Farraj
|
Needless
invention |
| 40
Ali
and Lawrence, riding
|
Invention, historically absurd dialogue |
|
41
EEF
Headquarters, Allenby talks with Brighton
|
Invention, historically absurd dialogue |
|
42
Ali and Lawrence [at Azrak]
|
Invention, completely at odds with Seven Pillars |
39 Death of Farraj
Invented scene
It seems that the Seven Pillars version of this was
not good enough for Bolt. In the film, Farraj is mortally injured by a
detonator. Ali refuses to shoot him, so Lawrence does so.
40 Ali and Lawrence
Brief fictional scene
-
Ali asks Lawrence what he will do now, with so few
men.
-
Lawrence replies 'Go north', adding bitterly 'What
would you recommend?'
-
The exchange only makes sense in relation to
Bolt's developing plot. It has nothing to do what that really
happened
41 GHQ - Allenby with Brighton
Invented scene - historically impossible
-
Brighton tells Allenby that Lawrence has lied
about the size of his army
-
Brighton thinks the Arabs may come back next year:
'They think he's a kind of prophet'. Allenby asks: 'They do or he does?'
-
An imaginary exchange which has no source,
incompatible with historical events
42 Lawrence and Ali at Azrak
Invented scene - historically absurd
-
Ali warns Lawrence that if there is 'one more
failure' he will find himself alone. He is asking them to do the
impossible. Lawrence says he knows what they can do
-
Lawrence goes into the room where the men are, and
asks 'Who will walk on water with me. Who will come with me into Deraa?'
-
They refuse, and Lawrence decides to go with Ali,
to keep his promise to Allenby. He appears irrational
The dwindling force theme is Bolt's invention. It has
nothing to do with Seven Pillars or any historical source.
| 43-47 Nemesis |
|
43
Lawrence
and Ali in Deraa
|
At first,
absurd invention, then Seven
Pillars
|
|
44
Lawrence and
Ali back at Azrak |
Invention
– no historical basis
|
|
45
Lawrence
with Feisal, Allenby and Dryden
|
•Invention – no historical basis
|
|
46
Bentley questions Dryden
|
Invention
– no historical basis
|
|
47
Allenby persuades Lawrence to go back
|
Highly
contentious invention, warping the characters of both
Lawrence and Allenby
|
43 Lawrence and Ali in Deraa
-
In one of the most absurd sequences in the film,
Lawrence (apparently believing that he is some kind of prophet)
tells Ali he is looking for 'Some way to announce myself'
-
He is stopped by a party of soldiers and taken to
the Turkish commander
-
What follows (while Ali waits in the street below)
is fairly mild, compared to what you would expect in a modern film. But
Lawrence of Arabia was made 40 years ago...
44 Lawrence and Ali at Azrak
Lawrence, completely broken, tells Ali he is leaving.
-
For Bolt 'Deraa explains everything'. It took
biographers quite a while to recover from that (some never have). In
reality, Lawrence had been deeply troubled by the fraudulence of his
role for months before the Deraa episode - his contemporary notes show
that he found this psychologically unbearable. These worries about moral
responsibility are clearly spelled out in Seven Pillars and in
his wartime notebooks and diaries. Here was a real anti-war theme -
yet Bolt's script never once mentions it? Why? I don't know
45 Lawrence at EEF HQ Jerusalem
Invented scene - no historical basis
-
Lawrence finds Allenby, Feisal and Dryden together
(in reality Allenby and Feisal met for the first time at Damascus)
-
Feisal leaves. He has found out about
Sykes-Picot. Dryden explains Sykes-Picot to Lawrence. The scene has
caused much confusion. In reality, Lawrence knew about Sykes-Picot
before the Arab Revolt began
-
Lawrence hands in his resignation, for 'personal'
reasons, asking for 'an ordinary job'. Allenby is angry. Dryden then
sees that Lawrence's back is bloodstained, draws Allenby's attention,
then leaves
46 Dryden and Bentley
Invented scene - no historical basis
-
Dryden, leaving, encounters Bentley, who asks
what is happening
-
Dryden refuses to say, then adds: 'It's a little
clash of temperament that's going on in there. One of them's half mad,
and the other wholly unscrupulous'
47 Lawrence and Allenby
Invented scene - no historical basis
-
Allenby becomes fatherly 'Tell me what happened'.
Allenby then plays on Lawrence's vanity. Lawrence knows he is being
manipulated, but cannot escape. He agrees, bitterly, to go back
-
Lawrence says that the Arabs won't be coming for
money, but for Damascus, which he'll give to them. And he'll get to
Damascus before Allenby 'and when we've got it, we'll keep it.' This
begins another false trail in the drama: 'the race to Damascus'
-
The false portrayal of Allenby here - doubtless
driven by Bolt's personal agenda - drew strong protests
-
Allenby promises all the money there is. Lawrence,
full of his own importance,
replies: 'The best of them won't come for money. They'll come for me.'
| 48-51 A changed man |
|
48
Back
with the northern army
|
Invented
scene - no historical basis
|
|
49
Allenby
briefing his officers
|
Brief
situation report – fiction but realistic
|
|
50
The
British artillery barrage in the distance
|
Brief
narrative incident
|
|
51
Allenby and Brighton in a staff car
|
•Brief invented conversation building the 'race
to Damascus' myth and setting up the forthcoming
clash at Tafas
|
48 Back with the Arab Army
Invented scene - no historical source
The film is now completely adrift from history.
-
Lawrence arrives with his hired bodyguard. Ali is
shocked. Lawrence even ignores Auda. He has completely changed. He has
bought half the men there. He no longer seems to have any personal
mission or feeling for the Arab Revolt
-
Bentley takes pictures
-
Lawrence shouts 'Damascus'
Cowboy-and-Indian scenes as the Arab army rides
off.
49 Allenby briefing
-
This shows the Allied forces closing in on
Damascus
-
Allenby asks Brighton where the Arabs are.
Brighton replies that you can only know by being with them
-
Allenby tells him to go
-
In reality, there were by this time a number of
British officers with the Arab forces
50 the British barrage
Brief invented scene
-
Ali, to Lawrence: 'God help the men who lie under
that.'
-
Lawrence, indifferently 'They are Turks'
-
Ali 'God Help them.'
51 Allenby and Brighton in a staff car
Brief invented scene
-
Sets up the clash between the Arab and Turkish
columns at Tafas
-
Brighton says Lawrence 'has the bit between his
teeth', and will get to Damascus before the British
| 52-54 The final advance |
| 52
Tafas
|
Incident
from Seven Pillars with invented dialogue and
highly contentious anti-war interpretation
|
| 53
Butchery at Tafas
|
•Invented treatment, fleshing out Bolt’s imagined
drama. Military victory must be a sordid business
|
|
54
The Arab army approaches Damascus
|
•Brief invented narrative scene
|
52 Tafas
Invented dialogue, making Lawrence personally
responsible - denied by Peake and others.
-
The Arab column arrives at Tafas where (shown
briefly) they find the women and children slaughtered
-
Lawrence is shown grappling with his wish to
wreak vengeance
-
Ali tries to dissuade him, urging him to skirt
the retreating column and go for Damascus
-
Talal rides out and is shot
-
Lawrence makes up his mind: 'No prisoners'
53 Butchery at Tafas
Invented treatment
-
Lawrence portrayed as carried away by blood lust
-
Is seen shooting a Turkish soldier who has his
hands up
-
Ali begs Lawrence to stop the butchery
-
Bentley appears and is shocked. Ali implies that
Lawrence, not the Arabs, was responsible for the butchery. Bentley
says 'Oh, you rotten man' - and takes a photo
All this is complete fiction.
54 Approaching Damascus
Brief fictional scene
-
A rider offers Lawrence grapes, cut in Damascus.
Lawrence tells him to offer them to Ali
-
Lawrence asks if Allenby is in Damascus. The Arab
replies 'Near.'
The fictional 'race to Damascus' theme once again.
| 55-62 |
|
55
Allenby arrives in
Damascus
|
Fiction |
| 56
The Town Hall
|
Fiction,
inconsistent with the historical record |
|
57
At Allenby’s headquarters – the
Arabs begin to leave
|
Allenby
was not closely involved with the civilian administration of
Damascus |
|
58
The Town Hall, now almost empty
|
Fictional
'clearing up' scene, not based on Seven Pillars |
|
59
Ali and Auda leave
|
Fictional 'clearing up'
scene, not based on Seven Pillars |
|
60-62
The Turkish military hospital
|
Dramatisation based loosely on Seven Pillars.
Used
here maliciously to represent Arab (rather than Turkish)
failure
|
55 Allenby arrives in Damascus
Invented scene
-
Allenby arrives at his new HQ in Damascus.
Brighton says the Arabs have been in the town for a day and a night,
have set up their HQ in the Town Hall, and have taken control of the
utilities
-
Allenby advised by Dryden, orders that the
British troops and technical and medical units should stay in their
barracks. They evidently believe that the Arab government will
quickly collapse
56 The Town Hall
Invented scene
The scene shows Auda, Ali and other Arab leaders,
bickering and complaining about machinery such as generators they do not
understand.
Bolt wishes to show the Arab Government collapsing
[there can be no victory]. To do this, he ignores the civilian
population of Damascus, which was now working for the Arab Government.
57 the Arabs begin to leave
Invented scene
Allenby, Dryden and Brighton are awaiting events.
-
The electricity fails, and then they hear the
Bedouin army beginning to leave the town
-
This is the failure they expected
58 the Town Hall, now almost empty
Invented scene, in which Bolt strongly implies that
the victory has been fruitless.
-
Auda tries to persuade Lawrence to return to the
desert. Lawrence refuses, and Auda leaves
-
Lawrence then turns to Ali, who says he will stay
and become a politician
-
Ali tells Lawrence 'You tried very hard to give us
Damascus'. Lawrence replies 'It's what I came for. And that would be
something.'
-
Ali also leaves
59 Ali and Auda leave
Invented scene
-
Leaving the Town Hall, Ali tells Auda of his
concern about Lawrence: 'How must he fear himself, who hates himself'
-
They exchange insults in the moonlight, before
parting
60-62 The Turkish military hospital
-
The medical officer protests to Allenby that he
must take charge
-
Allenby tells him to go to the Town Hall
-
In the Town Hall, he finds Lawrence, who asks
what it is like
-
The film cuts to the hospital. Lawrence, alone,
wanders round
-
The British medical staff arrive. The officer in
charge approaches Lawrence, who laughs hysterically, and is slapped
on the face
-
See Seven Pillars
| 63-66 |
|
63
Allenby,
Feisal and Lawrence meet at Damascus
|
•Invented dialogue – no source
|
|
64
Lawrence
leaves the meeting
|
|
|
65
Allenby
and Feisal talk
|
Invented
dialogue – no source
|
| 66
Lawrence is driven away
|
No source
|
63 Allenby Feisal and Lawrence at Damascus
Invented and misleading dialogue
-
Feisal and Allenby have no further use for
Lawrence. Faisal comments: 'There is nothing further here for a
warrior.' He and Allenby are negotiating a political bargain over
the control of the utilities
-
They are both happy to see Lawrence leave, bidding
him courteously farewell. As he leaves, Feisal says 'What I owe you is
beyond evaluation'
64 Lawrence leaves the meeting
Invented scene
The medical officer who has slapped Lawrence's face
at the Turkish military hospital does not recognise him, and asks to
shake his hand.
65 Allenby and Feisal remain behind
Invented dialogue - while such a meeting did take
place at Damascus, the Arab administration was far more competent than
is implied here
-
Feisal and Allenby are negotiating. Allenby
claims that the Arab power is illusory. Feisal produces a newspaper
report
-
Allenby argues that the Arab army was led by a
serving British officer. Feisal replies: 'Ah yes. But the Aurens is a
sword with two edges. We are equally glad to be rid of him, are we not?'
-
Allenby and Feisal then reach a compromise over
control of the water works
66. Lawrence is driven away
There is no record of how Lawrence left Damascus.