![]() ![]() This remains Dirk Bogarde's defining cinematic role. One thing is for certain: once "The Servant" is seen, one never quite forgets it. It could be a play about something very important or about nothing. As in his subversive play, "The Homecoming," Pinter manages to hold the attention with his unique pregnant pauses and hypnotic ambiance, which are actually illusionary. After the shoe's on the other foot and a few points are scored in this cheesy power game, where's the spoil? What does drive this drama is Pinter's genius for inventing small talk that gives the illusion of grandeur Losey's direction is right on the mark, and the production design, score, photography-and the acting-are all top drawer. Whatever the goal, it all seems a tawdry victory. Richard unveils a disturbing affair in which social and sexual barriers have disintegrated. Yet after a series of quirkly developments transpire and the tables of manservant and master are reversed, what's the real gain? What was there in the house in the first place that was worth all the fuss and bother to acquire? Satisfaction of taking over the master role? About midpoint Tony's girlfriend Susan asks servant Hugo, "What do you want from this house?" It's a direct and pointed question that's ambiguously answered ("I'm just the servant, mum.") That ambiguity carries the dramatic tension along its murky but intriguing path, as a strange play of power and manipulation unfolds. ![]()
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