The Servant (1963)
Theatrical Release Information | See Details About All Versions
Wealthy wastrel James Fox hires insouciant cockney Dirk Bogarde as a valet. No sooner has he donned his working clothes than Bogarde begins exercising a subtle but insidious control over his master. Suggesting that the house could use a little fixing up, Bogarde convinces Fox to spend a whopping amount of money on it. But this is just a warm-up session for Bogarde, who by mid-film is calling all the shots in the Fox household, all the while pretending to keep his place. Fox's fiance Wendy Craig sees through Bogarde's game. Bogarde then brings his own lady friend Sarah Miles into the house. At Bogarde's insistence, Miles seduces Fox, thereby loosening Craig's hold on the confused young man. And so it goes. The homosexual subtext of The Servant disturbed some of the more hidebound critics of 1963; Harold Pinter based his cryptic screenplay on a novel by Robin Maugham. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Theatrical Feature Running Time:
- 115 mins
Complete Cast:
- Dirk Bogarde - Hugo Barrett
- Wendy Craig - Susan
- Catherine Lacey - Lady Mounset
- Ann Firbank - Society Woman
- Jill Melford - Younger Woman
- Harold Pinter - Society Man
- Brian Phelan - Man in Pub
- Hazel Terry - Woman in Bedroom
- Johnny Dankworth - Jazz Bandleader
- Philippa Hare - Girl in Bedroom
- Sarah Miles - Vera
- James Fox - Tony
- Richard Vernon - Lord Mounset
- Patrick Magee - Bishop
- Alun Owen - Curate
- Dorothy Bromiley - Girl Outside Phone Box
- Alison Seebohm - Girl in Pub
- Chris Williams - Cashier in Coffee Bar
- Derek Tansley - Head Waiter
- Gerry Duggan - Waiter
- Director(s):
- Joseph Losey
- Writer(s):
- Harold Pinter
- Producer(s):
- Joseph Losey, Norman Priggen
- Closed Captioning:
- Check All Versions
- Subtitles:
- Check All Versions
- 1963 - The Servant - British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Best Black and White Cinematography
- 1963 - The Servant - British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Best British Actor
- 1964 - The Servant - New York Film Critics Circle - Best Screenplay








