For fans of this film: please address these criticisms --
I do not consider this a bad film, just a very flawed attempt at a masterpiece. (FWIW, "Bridge Over the River Kwai" and "Lawrence of Arabia" are both in my personal Top 10 of favorites)
However:
>the story is at least nominally about Zhivago, but almost all of the first 1/2 hour is about Lara
>Zhivago and Lara apparently fall in love while working together at the makeshift hospital. And yet -- there is not one second of screen time provided to show how this relationship developed -- this is a MAJOR oversight. Perhaps David Lean, who typically shot miles of footage during his productions, had to cut parts of the film due to length. BUT -- there were numerous other areas where he could have cut to make room for this essential part of the story's development, like a little less of the Kamorovksy section, or the pointless later scene with Strevilinsky in the train. In one scene, Lara and Zhivago have been brought to the hospital to help; and then in the very next scene, presumably a number of months later, they are getting ready to leave, and Zhivago expresses his feelings for Lara, and she more or less reciprocates. Since this relationship is integral to the story, we really should have been shown how and why it blossomed --
>too many contrived plot developments -- specifically, characters who knew each other years earlier, in completely different locations, keep running into each other
>Ralph Richardson and Siobahn McKenna, both great actors, are miscast
>although I love the wonderful wide shots Lean gives us throughout this film, they tend to be overly long, as if he's intending for some profound connotation to emerge