
Saludos
No hay ni un dato técnico ni una captura por eso lo decía por si la tienes descargada y los podías poner tú.McGufin escribió:Zeppogrouxo, en el post a que se refiere el enlace de mi anterior mensaje hay cumplida información del ripeo que reitero es excelente.
Yo por mi parte he extraido de la imagen nero el avi y los subtitulos para las partes no dobladas al español y he unido los tres archivos.
He probado varios subtítulos que he encontrado en titles y OS y al principio van bien, aplicando algún pequeño delay, pero a partir de las dos horas y algo se desincronizan. Hay otros que no he probado porque están divididos en varios cd's y no tengo tiempo ahora mismo para sincronizarlos a ojo.vigi escribió:advancedfilesize
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This sweeping, highly literate historical epic covers the Allies' mideastern campaign during World War I as seen through the eyes of the enigmatic T. E. Lawrence (Peter O'Toole, in the role that made him a star). After a prologue showing us Lawrence's ultimate fate, we flash back to Cairo in 1917. A bored general staffer, Lawrence talks his way into a transfer to Arabia. Once in the desert, he befriends Sherif Ali Ben El Kharish (Omar Sharif, making one of the most spectacular entrances in movie history) and draws up plans to aid the Arabs in their rebellion against the Turks. No one is ever able to discern Lawrence's motives in this matter: Prince Feisal (Alec Guinness) dismisses him as yet another "desert-loving Englishman," and his British superiors assume that he's either arrogant or mad. Using a combination of diplomacy and bribery, Lawrence unites the rival Arab factions of Feisal and Auda Abu Tayi (Anthony Quinn). After successfully completing his mission, Lawrence becomes an unwitting pawn of the Allies, as represented by Gen. Allenby (Jack Hawkins) and Dryden (Claude Rains), who decide to keep using Lawrence to secure Arab cooperation against the Imperial Powers. While on a spying mission to Deraa, Lawrence is captured and tortured by a sadistic Turkish Bey (Jose Ferrer). In the heat of the next battle, a wild-eyed Lawrence screams "No prisoners!" and fights more ruthlessly than ever. Screenwriters Robert Bolt and Michael Wilson used T. E. Lawrence's own self-published memoir The Seven Pillars of Wisdom as their principal source, although some of the characters are composites, and many of the "historical" incidents are of unconfirmed origin. Two years in the making (you can see O'Toole's weight fluctuate from scene to scene), the movie, lensed in Spain and Jordan, ended up costing a then-staggering $13 million and won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. The 1962 Royal Premiere in London was virtually the last time that David Lean's director's cut was seen: 20 minutes were edited from the film's general release, and 15 more from the 1971 reissue. This abbreviated version was all that was available for public exhibition until a massive 1989 restoration, at 216 minutes that returned several of Lean's favorite scenes while removing others with which he had never been satisfied.
--Hal Erickson
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OS iLUMiNADOS proudly presents: = = ============= { = Lawrence of Arabia = } ============= = = Release Date: 04/10/2008 Theater Date: 10/12/1962 DVD Date: 08/09/2003 Source: DVD Retail PAL Runtime: 217min 43s Video Codec: XviD 1.1.3 final Video Bitrate: ~1465 kbps Audio Codec: AC3 Audio Bitrate: 448kbps 5.1ch Interleave: 96/96ms Subs: English, Dutch, Hindi, English HoH Resolution: 688x304 Aspect Ratio: 2.26:1 Frame Rate: 25.000 fps Size: 1 x 2984mb (2/3 DVDR size) IMDb Rating: 8.6/10 Genre: Adventure / Biography / Drama Jawor's ZSM Matrix, B-VOP, No QPEL, No GMC, No P-BIT IMDb Link: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056172/ = = ============= ============================================ ============= = =