A spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down. The sugar: a terrific love story. The medicine: the wanton cruelty and dehumanization endemic to the nascent Soviet Union. Director David Lean – King of the Epics – reunited with Omar Sharif and several essential crew members from Lawrence of Arabia for this powerful concoction, adding in the sublimely talented young beauty Julie Christie as “Lara,” the muse.
Mix in Lara’s Theme, one of the most successful leitmotifs in movie history, and this 3ΒΌ hour classic is a must-see for romance lovers and history buffs alike.
Two words: five Oscars.
Omar Sharif & Julie Christie are a classic movie couple, distinctive and touching.
Christie proved herself a stellar actor in the scene where she discovers Zhivago’s poetry about her character: Idly curious at first, her face slowly registers profound emotional impact even as she raises an arm to deflect her poet-lover’s interruption of her reverie. Wow.
Sharif’s Zhivago has come to personify the heroically sensitive leading man.
David Lean knew how to put historical epics on screen in grand fashion. Reuniting with his Lawrence of Arabia screenwriter (Robert Bolt), cinematographer (Freddie Young) and composer (Maurice Jarre), it seems he could have hardly missed.
Mild of language, but pretty strong in its violence, especially for a 60s movie. Beware especially a chastely filmed rape scene.
Revolutionary Communist regimes … claim jurisdiction over the whole life of the society and make demands for change that so violate internalized values and habits that inhabitants flee by the tens of thousands in the remarkable expectation that their attitudes, values, and goals will ‘fit’ better in a foreign country than in their native land.
So wrote former US Ambassador to the UN Jeane Kirkpatrick in her classic Commentary article Dictatorships & Double Standards. Doctor Zhivago illuminates this truth in moving fashion.