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The Servant (1963)

The Servant (1963)
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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, Rovi

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Starring:
Dirk BogardeSarah Miles, (more)
Director(s):
Joseph Losey
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Servant

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, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
115 mins

Complete Cast of The Servant


Director(s):
Joseph Losey
Writer(s):
Harold Pinter
Producer(s):
Joseph LoseyNorman Priggen
The Servant Awards:
  • 1963 - British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Most Promising Newcomer
  • 1963 - British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Best Black and White Cinematography
  • 1963 - British Academy of Film and Television Arts - Best British Actor
  • 1964 - New York Film Critics Circle - Best Screenplay
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    Member Reviews
     
    Heidi A.

    The Servant is superbly crafted and brilliantly written. I don't think I've ever seen another film that captures psychological power and it's consequence as well as this. Dirk Bogarde is amazing. It's solidly directed. The photography enhances the subject. Fascinating.

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    James L.

    What a powerful film. You get suckered right in and then pow! Why did Tony take Barrett back for the 2nd time. I thought maybe there was a homosexual subplot going on. It was sad to see Tony spiral down hill as an alcholic. The ending I didn't like but it makes you think as to what the future holds for these two very different men. You want to stand up and protect Tony but you can't. ~ Susan L.

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    James S.

    "The Servant" is the first of the three collaborations of director Joseph Losey and playwright Harold Pinter - the others being "Accident" and "The Go-Between." It's a trilogy of sorts, as all three deal with the use/abuse of power, sexism and the English class system. Bogarde gives one of his finest performances here, as a conniving servant who turns the tables and becomes master of the house, smugly engineering his youthful employer's downfall. I do regret the last section of the film, which seems out of kilter stylistically and now all too obvious. Losey was a fine craftsman, if somewhat baroque by nature. His abrupt changes of style, point of view and time shuffling would mar his films, especially "The Go-Between," which is nearly undone by scattering the film's last scene through the movie."The Servant" was a turning point in restoring Losey's career, which had been tarnished by the Hollywood blacklist in the 1950s.

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