From the editor and writers of Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors from Classical Hollywood to Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
David Hudson, IFC.com
David Hudson, IFC.com
Class Dismissed
Revisiting Losey and Pinter's misunderstood masterpiece, The Servant
They also serve who only stand and annihilate
As Hugo Barrett, the manservant with a private agenda, Dirk Bogarde achieves more with a glance or a slight movement in Joseph Losey's The Servant than another actor would have accomplished bringing a lifetime of stage technique to the part. Barrett is a phenomenally complex, delicate role, and the wrong actor could have easily thrown the entire film out of balance simply by leaning too heavily on a line or holding a beat just a second too long. What it needed was an actor possessing both prodigious intelligence and intuition, and Bogarde was, in that sense, perfectly suited for it. Throughout his career he'd refined his screen acting to such an extent that he was fully capable of endowing even the most hopeless films (The Spanish Gardener, for instance, or I Could Go On Singing) with a measure of eloquence they might not have deserved. Luchino Visconti certainly knew this Bogarde's largely wordless performance in Death in Venice was perhaps his finest and so did Joseph Losey. From the compulsive criminal of The Sleeping Tiger to the tightly wound Oxford don of Accident, Bogarde seemed the best channel for realizing Losey's chronicles of civilized (and quite often uncivilized) treachery, a Pop Art mess like Modesty Blaise notwithstanding. In one of the most enigmatic films to come out of Great Britain, The Servant, both artists along with screenwriter Harold Pinter succeeded in rendering a study of human power, its limits as well as its possibilities, that, over forty years after its release remains a far more subtle, less baldly allegorical work than critics and some audiences first surmised.
Of course, within the context of British cinema in the 1960s, the prevailing view of The Servant as a social allegory was altogether predictable. From the moment the so-called "kitchen sink" phenomenon of British stage drama and literature began to reach the screen in the late 1950s, moviegoers in Britain had a number of convulsive, angry works dumped in their laps, adapted from the novels, stories, and plays of Alan Shillitoe, John Osborne, John Braine, and Shelagh Delaney. Like their sources, films such as Room at the Top (1958), Look Back in Anger (1959), and Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1961) were intensely informed by issues of class, emerging in more or less enraged response to a postwar climate when notions of a truly classless British society were promoted with a straight face by many of its leaders. The movies militated against this sophistry more vividly than their literary antecedents ever could, directly rubbing the world's nose in stark, incriminating, black-and-white evidence of rigidly enforced class structures, dreary factories, bombed-out ruins, stultifying housing developments, and numberless other visions of a ruinously dull and decaying Britain. The directors in this cinematic movement the old "Free Cinema" crowd of the 1950s (Karel Reisz, Lindsay Anderson, Tony Richardson) utilized their prodigious skills in the documentary arena to give their audience nothing less than Britain's answer to Italian neorealism: an epoch of human and societal disfigurement, calling everyone's attention to a terminal malaise that, given the trajectory of their later careers, perhaps afflicted the filmmakers more directly than the country itself. The formal posture of these films so dominated British cinema of this period that practically every movie coming out of England, regardless of its subject matter, was received as yet another moral bench warrant served on the upper classes (even as seemingly benign and cheerful a work as Lester's A Hard Day's Night was seen by some to embody this social implication). So what else were moviegoers supposed to think?
Matters of Class may have been a principal subtext of the novel from which The Servant was derived (a novel I confess I have not read), but in no sense are they anything more than a vague underpinning of either the movie Joseph Losey directed or, particularly, the screenplay Harold Pinter wrote. This is a film about power, in its most basic and consuming forms.
Hugo Barrett (Bogarde) arrives at three-on-the-dot for an appointment. His prospective employer, Tony (James Fox), is an upper-class wastrel just come into his inheritance. He's purchased a pleasant, tastefully appointed house on Royal Avenue, Chelsea, and fixed it up with all the appurtenances proper to a gentleman of his station. He intends to begin life anew, hoping eventually to install his current fiancé Susan (Wendy Craig) as his good lady wife. But all of this is set to happen sometime in the future. For now he's just a wealthy bachelor, no more. Tony is not in fact an indolent dilettante; he has some ambition. Currently he's involved in the planning of a frightfully improving and altogether lucrative development project: constructing low-income housing for the peoples of Asia Minor by blasting a few hundred miles of Brazilian rain forest to hell and gone. Such ambitions, however, tend to consume large quantities of a man's time, so Tony is in need of a live-in manservant, a "gentleman's gentleman" as they were known so long ago.
As an institution, manservants were indispensable to Britain's upper classes in earlier decades of that country's social history. They were essentially male nannies, superannuated babysitters. Quaint, quiet men whose tasks were to protect the interests of a gentleman; service his household needs with fixed devotion; and, most important, suggest no evidence of an independent will. But they were also largely obsolete by the latter half of the twentieth century, existing exclusively as a hangover from feudal traditions that were dead before the newly privileged were born. Tony, being a freshly minted member of Britain's vanishing aristocracy, doesn't seem to be aware of this, and it's unlikely he'd care very much if he was. He sees the employment of a manservant as a positive necessity, a way of observing the forms so essential to his status. And Barrett looks to be the best candidate for the job who's ever drawn a breath. He's well mannered, decently turned out, exudes competence from every pore. What's more, the man can cook.
Barrett not only lives up to Tony's expectations from the first, he transcends them. More than just capable, he's a domestic phenomenon. There isn't an element in the running of this household he doesn't excel at. Barrett oversees the furnishing and decoration of the house before Tony moves in; he does the cooking, the cleaning, the clearing away, the dusting off, the locking up. His expert maintenance of Tony's domicile is total and his demeanor deferential in the extreme. Tony is utterly enthralled, because he doesn't have to lift a finger to do anything. Barrett does it all for him. By the standard any gentleman of privilege would apply, it's a paradise on earth. Except for Tony's fiancé, Susan. Susan doesn't like Barrett. In fact, she detests him. Her contempt isn't something she can articulate easily. It's just that, well, he's always there, isn't he? Behind every door, just outside every room. Barrett hangs about the place day and night like a growth of Spanish moss, always with that infernal cleaning rag and room deodorizer in hand. One evening, while she and Tony are spending a few cozy hours by the fireside, Barrett barges in just as they're about to make love. He beats a hasty retreat ever so sorry but it does little to restore their ardor. For Susan, this represents the last straw. Incensed, she puts the matter to Tony directly: Get rid of him. Tony refuses steadfastly. He has no rationale for not dispensing with his increasingly intrusive manservant; he can barely comprehend the reason himself. In the blissful few months of Barrett's service, Tony has grown so dependent on him that whatever core of self-sufficiency he might have had has vanished. Tony can't seem to tie his own shoes without Barrett, and he just can't let him go. After all, where would he be without Barrett? The Brazilian venture, it turns out, has been one enormous pipe dream. And a dilettante with no occupation is still a dilettante. Outside of his faltering engagement to Susan, Barrett's devotion to Tony's life is the only thing in it with any meaning, and he's obligated to do whatever it takes to keep him, even if that means hiring Barrett's sister Vera (Sarah Miles) to fill in the remaining duties of a housekeeper, or letting Barrett consume more and more of his will if it should come to that. When Vera arrives, all hell breaks loose. This Manchester honey tight sweaters, short skirts, and yummy legs doesn't have Barrett's polish, and she's a bit clumsy in the performance of her duties (carrying the breakfast tray as though it were a block of cement, for instance), but she is aggressively hot. Tony might be a twit, but he's no fool. He knows a nice young thing when he sees one, and this one is very nice indeed. What's more, she's practically offering it to him on a plate only days after her arrival. A man would have to be dead to resist. This is when it becomes clear that Barrett's scheme, whatever it is, has begun in earnest.
Critical response to The Servant was laudatory, bordering on the ecstatic. It seemed everyone from Penelope Gilliat, Philip Oakes, and Richard Roud in Britain to Andrew Sarris, Eugene Archer, and Brendan Gill in the U.S. found the occasion sufficient for superlatives (though Archer's encomium was somewhat mitigated by his recent behind-the-scenes effort at persuading Losey to adapt Faulkner's The Wild Palms, an example of the ethical conflicts American auteurists were falling prey to under the Cahiers influence of those heady days). Even newspaper critics who people actually read, such as Bosley Crowther and Judith Crist, found much to praise, little to damn. They noted the uniformly fine performances, particularly those of Bogarde and Fox; Losey's fluid, beautifully understated direction; as well as the overall impenetrability of Harold Pinter's screenplay. In fact, much of what makes The Servant such a remarkably compelling work is the manner in which these elements converge in a still-rare formal harmony. But when it came to analyzing The Servant, cinemagoers were soon laboring under the dolorous weight of a view that simply took it for granted that the movie was obviously some form of allegory, a social morality play beating the deadest horse in Christendom: Britain's tired class system. It was an unfortunately limited reading of The Servant that nevertheless obtains to this day. Numberless critics concluded that Barrett and Tony had, in the end, simply exchanged places, that Barrett's skillful manipulation of his employer from passivity to dependence to dissipation and outright depravity represented a form of victory, however pyrrhic, for the working classes. To be fair, Joseph Losey's background as an expatriate who fled Hollywood's anti-Communist pogrom a decade before helped codify this view. The same, however, could not be said for Harold Pinter.
Although Pinter was a contemporary of John Osborne and Arnold Wesker and was often cited as an essential figure in the "Angry Young Man" school of British theater those men had largely forged his work resembled theirs only superficially. While Osborne's plays, for example, couldn't have been more direct about their social concerns, Pinter's were obscure to the point of abstraction. If he was "angry" about anything, it was impossible to determine what he was angry about. His work was simply never concerned with the larger issues of society, and the only politics he routinely confronted were those in the language of human interaction, He was endlessly preoccupied with the treacheries inherent in the most time-worn relations. In fact, it was the only theme he returned to again and again: the subtle determination of some to undermine and destroy one another while maintaining a façade of order and civility. In this respect, his screenplay for The Servant is one of his greatest works, the equal of anything he wrote for the stage. With his devastating economy of dialogue and explication, he unblinkingly chronicles the savage destruction of one man's will at the hands of another; not the half-bright social parable of some critics' dreams. This, and not a barely existent subtext, is what makes The Servant such a disturbing film.
Viewers and critics who sought to drown The Servant in sociopolitical syrup were avoiding the obvious. There is something indeed tragic about the decline of this upper-class twit that failed to register with more class-conscious critics. In the final sequence, when Susan sees for herself the sodden, hopeless laudanum freak Tony has become, and flees from what she suddenly realizes was always Barrett's house, she clings to a tree and weeps uncontrollably. And along with her, we can't help but feel that, despite Tony's basic lack of character, something has been irretrievably lost. But anyone who imagined that some fundamental reversal had taken place between Barrett and Tony at the end needed glasses. Barrett is no more the "working-class hero" of The Servant than Tony is. Though Barrett has laid waste to Tony's will more thoroughly than if he'd murdered him, he's still the man's servant. He continues to cook the meals, fix the drinks, answer the doorbell, lock up at night. He has attained an enduring power over Tony, and can now indulge himself with the impunity of a Tiberius. But it is a limited power. A power achieved only by performing his duties, by pleasing his employer.
It's his house, yes, but he still observes the forms. And he still has his job to do.
When not writing about film, Tom Sutpen produces community television in the Greater Boston area and collects Jean Goldkette recordings.
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