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The Birthday Party

 
Movies:

The Birthday Party

  • Director: William Friedkin
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy Drama
  • Movie Type: Crime Comedy
  • Themes: Haunted By the Past
  • Main Cast: Robert Shaw, Patrick Magee, Dandy Nichols, Sydney Tafler, Moultrie Kelsall
  • Release Year: 1968
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 123 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: G

Plot

Harold Pinter's theatrical piece The Birthday Party was committed to celluloid in 1968 by future Exorcist director William Friedkin. Robert Shaw plays a boarder in a sleazy British seaside-resort rooming house. The landlady (Dandy Nichols) holds a cheerless birthday party for Shaw, which is invaded by a couple of shady characters named Goldberg (Sidney Tafler) and McCann (Patrick Magee). No one knows why they're there except for Shaw, who after being repeatedly humiliated by the despicable duo is taken away by them to parts unknown. The Birthday Party ends with 30 seconds of a totally blank screen. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Helen Fraser - Lulu

Credit

Edward Marshall - Art Director, Andrew Grieve - First Assistant Director, William Friedkin - Director, Antony Gibbs - Editor, Edgar J. Scherick - Executive Producer, Edward Marshall - Production Designer, Denys Coop - Cinematographer, Max Rosenberg - Producer, Milton Subotsky - Producer, Norman Bolland - Sound/Sound Designer, Harold Pinter - Screenwriter, Harold Pinter - Play Author

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Wikipedia: The Birthday Party (film)
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The Birthday Party
Directed by William Friedkin
Produced by Max Rosenberg
Milton Subotsky
Written by Harold Pinter
Starring Robert Shaw
Patrick Magee
Dandy Nichols
Sydney Tafler
Moultrie Kelsall
Helen Fraser
Cinematography Denys Coop
Editing by Antony Gibbs
Distributed by Continental Motion Pictures Corporation
Release date(s) December 9, 1968
Running time 119 Mins
Country USA
Language English

The Birthday Party is a 1968 film directed by William Friedkin, based on an unpublished screenplay by 2005 Nobel Laureate Harold Pinter, which he adapted from his own play The Birthday Party, considered an example of Pinter's "comedy of menace".

Contents

Synopsis

The protagonist is a lodger in his late 30s named Stanley (Webber), played by Robert Shaw, who is staying at a seaside boarding house; he is visited by two unexpected additional guests, menacing and mysterious strangers, Goldberg (Sydney Tafler) and McCann (Patrick Magee). Their neighbour, Lulu (Helen Fraser) brings her a parcel, a boy's toy drum presented to Stanley as his "birthday present." Goldberg and McCann offer to host Stanley's birthday party after Stanley's landlady, Meg (Boles), played by Dandy Nichols, tells them that it is Stanley's birthday, although Stanley protests that it is really not his birthday. In the course of the party, Goldberg and McCann break Stanley down and ultimately take him away from the house purportedly to get medical attention (from "Monty") in their car. The film ends (as the play ends) after Meg's husband Petey (Moultrie Kelsall), a deckchair attendant, who did not attend the party because he was out playing cards, calls after Stanley, "Stan, don't let them tell you what to do"; at the end, Meg, still somewhat hung over, is unaware that Stanley has been taken away, since Petey has not told her that, and tells him that she was "the belle of the ball."

Cast

Actor Role
Robert Shaw Stanley
Patrick Magee McCann
Dandy Nichols Meg
Sydney Tafler Goldberg
Moultrie Kelsall Petey
Helen Fraser Lulu
Bernadette Milnes (uncredited)

Critical reception

In his film review, published in The Nation on 6 January 1969, critic Harold Clurman described the film as "a fantasia of fear and prosecution," adding that "Pinter's ear is so keen, his method so economic and so shrewdly stylized, balancing humdrum realistic notations with suggestions of unfathomable violence, that his play succeeds in being both funny and horrific" (excerpted in HaroldPinter.org).

As the reviewer of the Evening Standard observed, in a description of the film published on 12 February 1970, the film, like the play, is "a study of domination that sows doubts, terrors, shuddering illuminations and terrifying apprehensions inside the four walls of a living-room in a seaside boarding-house where Stanley, (Robert Shaw), the lodger, has taken refuge from some guilt, crime, treachery, in fact Some Thing, never named" (excerpted in HaroldPinter.org).

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Birthday Party (film)" Read more