The Servant (1963 film)
The Servant is a 1963 British drama film directed by Joseph Losey. It was written by Harold Pinter, who adapted Robin Maugham's 1948 novella. The Servant stars Dirk Bogarde, Sarah Miles, Wendy Craig and James Fox. It opened at London's Warner Theatre on 14 November 1963.[2]
The Servant | |
---|---|
Directed by | Joseph Losey |
Produced by | Joseph Losey Norman Priggen |
Written by | Robin Maugham (novel) Harold Pinter (screenplay) |
Starring | Dirk Bogarde Sarah Miles James Fox Wendy Craig |
Music by | John Dankworth |
Cinematography | Douglas Slocombe |
Edited by | Reginald Mills |
Distributed by | Landau Releasing Organisation Elstree Distributors Limited |
Release date | 14 November 1963 |
Running time | 115 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £135,000[1] |
The first of Pinter's three film collaborations with Losey, which also include Accident (1967) and The Go-Between (1971), The Servant is a tightly constructed psychological dramatic film about the relationships among the four central characters examining issues relating to social class, servitude and the ennui of the upper classes.[3]
Plot
Tony a wealthy young Londoner who says he is part of a scheme to build cities in Brazil, moves into his new house and hires Hugo Barrett as his manservant. Initially, Barrett appears to take easily to his new job, and he and Tony form a quiet bond, retaining their social roles. Relationships begin shifting, however, with the introduction of Susan, Tony's girlfriend, who is suspicious of Barrett. She wants Tony to dismiss his servant, but he refuses.
Barrett introduces his lover Vera, whom he pretends is his sister, into Tony's household as a maidservant. Barrett gets Vera to seduce Tony who, when he eventually catches them together in his bedroom, dismisses them in a rage. Susan, who is present, leaves the house in disgust when she realises what has been going on. But Tony had become reliant on Barrett and now lives in drunken squalor and will not answer the phone when Susan rings him. Finally he encounters Barrett in a pub and allows himself to be persuaded to have his servant back.
Gradually the two reverse roles, with Barrett becoming more domineering and Tony retreating into infantalism. In the final scene, Susan finds Tony totally dependent on Barrett, who keeps him supplied with alcohol and fills the house with prostitutes. She strikes Barrett across the face as she leaves and he helps her on with her coat.
Cast and characters
- Dirk Bogarde as Hugo Barrett
- Sarah Miles as Vera
- Wendy Craig as Susan Stewart
- James Fox as Tony
- Catherine Lacey as Lady Agatha Mounset
- Richard Vernon as Lord Willie Mounset
- Patrick Magee as Bishop (Restaurant)
- Alun Owen as Curate (Restaurant)
- Doris Nolan as Older Woman (Restaurant)
- Jill Melford as Younger Woman (Restaurant)
- Ann Firbank as Society Woman (Restaurant)
- Harold Pinter as Society Man (Restaurant)
- Dorothy Bromiley as Girl Outside Phone Box
- Johnny Dankworth as Jazz Bandleader
- Davy Graham as Himself (Pub)
Losey's adaptation
"It was Losey who first showed Robin Maugham's novella The Servant to Bogarde in 1954. Originally separately commissioned by director Michael Anderson, Pinter stripped it of its first-person narrator, its yellow book snobbery, and the arguably anti-Semitic characterisation of Barrett – oiliness, heavy lids – replacing them with an economical language that implied rather than stated the slippage of power relations away from Tony towards Barrett."[3]
Losey's other collaborations with Pinter, Accident and The Go-Between, share a resemblance to The Servant in that these offer the same savage indictment of the waning English class system,[4] a theme which British film-makers previously had not explored.
Music
The soundtrack by John Dankworth includes the song "All Gone", sung by Cleo Laine, used repeatedly in the film.
Folk guitarist Davy Graham makes a brief cameo playing the song Rock Me Baby.
Awards
- Winner, Best Cinematography - British Society of Cinematographers (Douglas Slocombe)
- Winner, Best Cinematography - BAFTA (Douglas Slocombe)
- Winner, Best Actor - BAFTA (Dirk Bogarde)
- Winner, Most Promising Newcomer - BAFTA (James Fox)
- Nominee, Best Picture - BAFTA (Joseph Losey, Norman Priggen)
- Nominee, Best Actress - BAFTA (Sarah Miles)
- Nominee, Best Screenplay - BAFTA (Harold Pinter)
- Nominee, Most Promising Newcomer - BAFTA (Wendy Craig)
- Winner, Best Foreign Director - Italian National Syndicate of Film Journalists (Joseph Losey)
- Winner, Best Screenplay - New York Film Critics Circle (Harold Pinter)
- Nominee, Best Actor - New York Film Critics Circle (Dirk Bogarde)
- Nominee, Best Director - New York Film Critics Circle (Joseph Losey)
- Nominee, Golden Lion - Venice International Film Festival (Joseph Losey)
- Winner, Best Dramatic Screenplay - Writers Guild of Great Britain (Harold Pinter)
See also
Notes
- Alexander Walker, Hollywood, England, Stein and Day, 1974, p. 209
- Kinematograph Weekly vol 558 no 2928, 14 November 1963
- Nick James, "Joseph Losey & Harold Pinter: In Search of PoshLust Times", BFI, British Film Institute, (last updated) 27 June 2007, Web, 19 June 2009: "From Venetian decadence and British class war to Proustian time games, the films of Joseph Losey and Harold Pinter gave us a new, ambitious, high-culture kind of art film, says Nick James."
- Losey, Joseph. "The Servant." UK: Studio Canal, 2007
Further reading
- Billington, Michael. Harold Pinter. London: Faber and Faber, 2007. ISBN 978-0-571-23476-9 (13). Updated 2nd ed. of The Life and Work of Harold Pinter. 1996. London: Faber and Faber, 1997. ISBN 0-571-17103-6 (10). Print.
- Gale, Steven H. Sharp Cut: Harold Pinter's Screenplays and the Artistic Process. Lexington. Kentucky: The UP of Kentucky, 2003. ISBN 0-8131-2244-9 (10). ISBN 978-0-8131-2244-1 (13). Print.
- Gale, Steven H., ed. The Films of Harold Pinter. Albany: SUNY P, 2001. ISBN 0-7914-4932-7. ISBN 978-0-7914-4932-5. Print.
- Sargeant, Amy: The Servant: Palgrave Macmillan/BFI Modern Classics: 2011: ISBN 1-84457-382-6
- Weedman, Christopher (2019). "A Dark Exilic Vision of 1960s Britain: Gothic Horror and Film Noir Pervading Losey and Pinter's The Servant." JCMS: Journal of Cinema and Media Studies 58.3, pp. 93–117.
External links
- "Films by Harold Pinter: The Servant 1963" at HaroldPinter.org – The Official Website of the International Playwright Harold Pinter
- "Harold Pinter & Joseph Losey", by Jamie Andrews, Harold Pinter Archive Blog, British Library, 15 June 2009.
- The Servant at IMDb
- The Servant at AllMovie – Includes "Plot synopsis"