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The Servant (English with French subtitles)
Wednesday, May 15th, 2024
at 20:30
Date
Wednesday, May 15th, 2024
at 20:30
Location
Main screening room
Date
May 15th, 2024
Duration
116 min
Cycle
Joseph Losey, the indomitable

Viewed from today's perspective, the cinema of Joseph Losey, who passed away forty years ago, has something elusive about it. Far from the stylistic quirks and preferred genres that characterize many works, Losey's seems eclectic and multifaceted, which may have unjustly condemned a portion of his significant filmography to obscurity. From the 1940s to the 1980s, he ventured into psychological drama, fantasy, comedy, crime thriller, and historical film, with precision in character study, emotional intensity, and a constantly renewed sense of direction. A friend of Bertolt Brecht as well as an English adoptee after being driven out of the United States by McCarthyism, Losey patiently and confidently forged his worldview through a gallery of disparate characters, often sharing the common experience of being hunted, stigmatized, or isolated.

Winner of three BAFTA Awards in 1964

The Servant
Directed by
Joseph Losey
Language
English with French subtitles
Actors
Dirk Bogarde, Sarah Miles, Wendy Craig
Origins
United Kingdom
Year
1963
Duration
116 min
Genre
Drama
Format
Digital
Synopsis

A young London aristocrat hires a servant. A complicity develops between the two men, but the tension shows in the quartet they form with the two women who share their lives. Gradually, the balance of power between master and servant is reversed...

The Servant
Awards

Joseph Losey

Born in 1909 in Wisconsin, Joseph Losey began studying medicine at Harvard before turning to theater. The 1929 crisis sensitized him to social issues, and he emerged in the 1930s as a committed theater director. He traveled to the Soviet Union where he met Bertolt Brecht, with whom he would later collaborate. Upon returning to the United States, he started directing while also becoming involved with the Communist Party, which led to scrutiny by McCarthyist authorities. Forced into exile in the United Kingdom, he subsequently made all his films in Europe. In the 60s, he met Harold Pinter, who would script three major works in his filmography: The Servant, Accident, and The Go-Between, which won the Palme d'Or at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival.

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Cast
About Joseph Losey
Filmography
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