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David Lean

David Lean

Birthday: 25 March 1908, Croydon, Surrey, England, UK
Height: 186 cm

An important British filmmaker, David Lean was born in Croydon in 1908 and brought up in a strict Quaker family (ironically, as a child he wasn't allowed to go to the movies). During the 1920s he ...Show More

David Lean
I find dialogue a bore, for the most part. I think that if you look back on any film you've seen, yo Show more I find dialogue a bore, for the most part. I think that if you look back on any film you've seen, you don't remember lines of dialogue, you remember pictures. Hide
Actors can be a terrible bore on the set, though I enjoy having dinner with them. Actors can be a terrible bore on the set, though I enjoy having dinner with them.
Casting is a nightmare because it is an eternal compromise. You hardly ever have the actor give a pe Show more Casting is a nightmare because it is an eternal compromise. You hardly ever have the actor give a performance of which you say, yes, that's right on it. They just haven't got that sense of humour, or they haven't got that feel about them or whatever it is. The nearest person to a perfect piece of casting was Trevor Howard in Ryan's Daughter (1970). He was just wonderful for the tunnel-vision priest - a kind of peasant who knew exactly what was right and what was wrong and was therefore not all that intelligent. Hide
[accepting the Best Director Oscar for Lawrence of Arabia (1962)] This limey is deeply touched and g Show more [accepting the Best Director Oscar for Lawrence of Arabia (1962)] This limey is deeply touched and greatly honoured. Thank you. Hide
[on Charles Laughton] Charm, you see, a terrific man to work with. You had to hold him down a bit. W Show more [on Charles Laughton] Charm, you see, a terrific man to work with. You had to hold him down a bit. What a talent! Hide
I think people remember pictures not dialogue. That's why I like pictures. I think people remember pictures not dialogue. That's why I like pictures.
These American writers really frighten me. They talk so well and write so badly. I have now worked w Show more These American writers really frighten me. They talk so well and write so badly. I have now worked with five of them and not one has come along with a big, original idea. Hide
I like making films about characters I'd like to have dinner with. I like making films about characters I'd like to have dinner with.
[1988 interview] I don't know about Brief Encounter (1945). I saw it the other day and I thought it Show more [1988 interview] I don't know about Brief Encounter (1945). I saw it the other day and I thought it was rather good, and I saw it a couple of years ago and I thought it was pretty awful. The magic of that film is Celia Johnson - she was wonderful! Hide
When the great actor says the line, you can put scissors precisely at the point A and it's wonderful Show more When the great actor says the line, you can put scissors precisely at the point A and it's wonderful. When the star says the line, you can hold for four frames longer because something else happens. Hide
I wouldn't take the advice of a lot of so-called critics on how to shoot a close-up of a teapot. I wouldn't take the advice of a lot of so-called critics on how to shoot a close-up of a teapot.
[1989, on the restored version of Lawrence of Arabia (1962)] Everyone worried about re-releasing Law Show more [1989, on the restored version of Lawrence of Arabia (1962)] Everyone worried about re-releasing Lawrence. They said the audiences have changed. They talk and shout at the screen; they're impatient; they wouldn't sit still for it. Not at all. You could hear a pin drop. London, New York, Washington, Los Angeles. Everywhere. I think audiences had almost forgotten the power of pictures. They've gotten smaller and smaller. And suddenly you see this old film, wonderfully photographed; tremendous detail; you almost feel you could take a hair off the actor's collar. There's a mesmeric effect from the picture on the screen. Hide
[on Anthony Asquith] A hell of a good director. [on Anthony Asquith] A hell of a good director.
[on the Academy Awards] If you have no hope of getting one, they're despised. But it you have, they' Show more [on the Academy Awards] If you have no hope of getting one, they're despised. But it you have, they're very important. Hide
Film is a dramatized reality and it is the director's job to make it appear real... an audience shou Show more Film is a dramatized reality and it is the director's job to make it appear real... an audience should not be conscious of technique. Hide
Always cast against the part and it won't be boring. Always cast against the part and it won't be boring.
[on film adaptations] I think the best you can do in a movie is to be faithful to the author's inten Show more [on film adaptations] I think the best you can do in a movie is to be faithful to the author's intention in all areas. With the two Dickens films I did - Great Expectations (1946) and Oliver Twist (1948) - they are, oh, pencil sketches of these great novels that he wrote, but I think they are faithful. I wouldn't have been ashamed to show him the films. Hide
[on Doctor Zhivago (1965)] Zhivago is a very passive part - he's a poet and a doctor - and a fatal p Show more [on Doctor Zhivago (1965)] Zhivago is a very passive part - he's a poet and a doctor - and a fatal pitfall would have been to cast too much with the type. If I'd had a very studious young man, I think he'd tend to be a bore in the picture and so I thought I'd go for immense good looks and I thought of Omar (Sharif) because he'd played the Sheik in Lawrence who came out of the mirage. He's a very sensitive actor and we happen to work very well together - he catches on - and I think it works and I thought I could get this Russian poet out of him, and I backed that hunch. A lot of people thought I was mad. Hide
I realise more and more that reality on the screen, which used to be the thing to aim at, is a sort Show more I realise more and more that reality on the screen, which used to be the thing to aim at, is a sort of bore. I don't mean that the audience should sit there and say, "Oh, that's unreal". But movies are a kind of dream and I think they should have an unreal edge to them, and that's what I try to do. Hide
I suppose I don't have much contact with actors off the set because I have so much contact with them Show more I suppose I don't have much contact with actors off the set because I have so much contact with them on the set. I'm trying to get things out of them - I'm squeezing them a little, I'm encouraging them - I'm a general sort of wet-nurse to actors. Hide
[on Doctor Zhivago (1965)] That film earned me more money than all my other films put together. It's Show more [on Doctor Zhivago (1965)] That film earned me more money than all my other films put together. It's a wonderful story - you want to know what happens next. And wonderful characters. And Julie (Christie).....which was quite a face. Hide
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