1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Mildly entertaining, visually splendid, but it could have been much better., 13 January 2007
Author:
Robin Moss from London, United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"The Black Tent" was made several years before "Lawrence Of Arabia."
Had it been made ten years later, it would have been accused of
plagiarism. Instead it can be said in some respects to anticipate
"Lawrence of Arabia".
After The Second World War, the heir to an extensive British country
estate complete with enormous house and agricultural land travels to
Libya to learn what happened to his brother. With one Arab to guide
him, he journeys by camel across the vast deserts to talk with a tribal
chief - as also happened in "Lawrence". After various delays, he is
given his brother's diary and learns the truth. During the war, his
brother had become detached from his regiment and had been the sole
Briton amongst Arabs - as was the case in "Lawrence Of Arabia" He had
led Arab fighters in ambushes on enemy patrols - as also happened in
"Lawrence Of Arabia". The brother had married the daughter of the
tribal chief, and eventually had been killed in action against German
soldiers. Again like "Lawrence Of Arabia" the cinematography - here in
VistaVision and Technicolor - shows the vastness of the desert and
makes it strangely beautiful.
Unlike "Lawrence Of Arabia" "The Black Tent" had a journeyman director,
and was made with little attention to detail or realism. All the Arabs
speak English fluently and with Received Pronunciation! Even more
ludicrously, the younger brother travels across the desert by camel
wearing a suit and tie and city shoes! He does not even break into a
sweat! More seriously, there is no tension in the movie. The action
sequences are unimaginatively staged, and scenes where suspense should
be agonising - such as when Germans enter the Arab camp and discover
the British soldier's gun or when German soldiers visit an ancient ruin
and take photographs of themselves within a few yards of the fugitive
British soldier - are entirely free of tension.
"The Black Tent" is mildly entertaining and is certainly visually
splendid, but it could and should have been much better.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Great scenery, terrible plot, 30 January 2003
Author:
Duncan Kennett from London
Even as a fan of Donald Sinden, this is only an OK offering. The most
enjoyable part has to be the amazing locations, set in Libya. The original
story was obviously a long novel that was a real struggle to compress into
a
script
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The Black Tent (1956)
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Mildly entertaining, visually splendid, but it could have been much better., 13 January 2007
Author: Robin Moss from London, United Kingdom
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
"The Black Tent" was made several years before "Lawrence Of Arabia." Had it been made ten years later, it would have been accused of plagiarism. Instead it can be said in some respects to anticipate "Lawrence of Arabia".
After The Second World War, the heir to an extensive British country estate complete with enormous house and agricultural land travels to Libya to learn what happened to his brother. With one Arab to guide him, he journeys by camel across the vast deserts to talk with a tribal chief - as also happened in "Lawrence". After various delays, he is given his brother's diary and learns the truth. During the war, his brother had become detached from his regiment and had been the sole Briton amongst Arabs - as was the case in "Lawrence Of Arabia" He had led Arab fighters in ambushes on enemy patrols - as also happened in "Lawrence Of Arabia". The brother had married the daughter of the tribal chief, and eventually had been killed in action against German soldiers. Again like "Lawrence Of Arabia" the cinematography - here in VistaVision and Technicolor - shows the vastness of the desert and makes it strangely beautiful.
Unlike "Lawrence Of Arabia" "The Black Tent" had a journeyman director, and was made with little attention to detail or realism. All the Arabs speak English fluently and with Received Pronunciation! Even more ludicrously, the younger brother travels across the desert by camel wearing a suit and tie and city shoes! He does not even break into a sweat! More seriously, there is no tension in the movie. The action sequences are unimaginatively staged, and scenes where suspense should be agonising - such as when Germans enter the Arab camp and discover the British soldier's gun or when German soldiers visit an ancient ruin and take photographs of themselves within a few yards of the fugitive British soldier - are entirely free of tension.
"The Black Tent" is mildly entertaining and is certainly visually splendid, but it could and should have been much better.
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

Great scenery, terrible plot, 30 January 2003
Author: Duncan Kennett from London
Even as a fan of Donald Sinden, this is only an OK offering. The most enjoyable part has to be the amazing locations, set in Libya. The original story was obviously a long novel that was a real struggle to compress into a script
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