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The Servant
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Directed by Joseph Losey.
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 nearly bankrupts Fox with expensive new furnishings. 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. To keep Craig at arm's length, Bogarde 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
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PuhnnerPuhnner Re: Favorites
by Puhnner in British Invasion
loved it.
"Here are 5, ok 6, not in any particular order that I find quite amazing:The ServantGangster No.1The Fallen IdolThe Quiet American ( I have not seen the original, although the director for this version, Philip Noyce is Australian, still imparts the very Graham Greene/English/British sensibility )and of course,The Third Manand The Spy who came in from the ColdNow please don't ask me to define the 'English/ British Sensibility'; I do not have a clue. I think that I have been so completely bamboozled by a huge diet of PBS and Master Piece Theater, that these films define it for me. I would love to hear someone from England say ' you have got to be kidding, this stuff is tripe, now this is the real deal...' and then go on and list the ones... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Few films have gotten as much mileage out of Britain's caste system as The Servant, a psycho-sexual black comedy charting the uneasy relationship between lazy young aristocrat Tony (James Fox) and his devious, reserved manservant Hugo (Dirk Bogarde). One of the first films scripted by playwright Harold Pinter, The Servant is as much about gesture and mannerism as about spoken innuendo, and director Joseph Losey keeps the movie thick with suggestion: Hugo's co-conspirator Vera (Sarah Miles) is a study in coy seduction, and the sounds, shadows, and furnishings around the young man's estate are downright suffocating. Though the locations are minimal, the director never lets the movie become too stagy; Bogarde's hilarious fight for a phone booth is the stuff of classic silent comedy. That Bogarde and Losey never specify Hugo's rationale for corrupting Tony (money? control? sexual longing?) only adds to The Servant's allure and its ambiguous, hallucinogenic ending. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 



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Puhnner
Puhnner
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