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Bartleby

  • 1970
  • PG
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
452
YOUR RATING
Paul Scofield and John McEnery in Bartleby (1970)
Drama

An asocial and enigmatic office clerk refuses to do his work, leaving it up to his boss to decide what should be done with him.An asocial and enigmatic office clerk refuses to do his work, leaving it up to his boss to decide what should be done with him.An asocial and enigmatic office clerk refuses to do his work, leaving it up to his boss to decide what should be done with him.

  • Director
    • Anthony Friedman
  • Writers
    • Rodney Carr-Smith
    • Anthony Friedman
    • Herman Melville
  • Stars
    • Paul Scofield
    • John McEnery
    • Thorley Walters
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    452
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anthony Friedman
    • Writers
      • Rodney Carr-Smith
      • Anthony Friedman
      • Herman Melville
    • Stars
      • Paul Scofield
      • John McEnery
      • Thorley Walters
    • 18User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos81

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    Top cast17

    Edit
    Paul Scofield
    Paul Scofield
    • The Accountant
    John McEnery
    John McEnery
    • Bartleby
    Thorley Walters
    Thorley Walters
    • The Colleague
    Colin Jeavons
    Colin Jeavons
    • Tucker
    Raymond Mason
    • Landlord
    Charles Kinross
    • Tenant
    Neville Barber
    • First Client
    Robin Askwith
    Robin Askwith
    • Office Boy
    Hope Jackman
    • Hilda - Tealady
    John H. Watson
    • Doctor
    • (as John Watson)
    Christine Dingle
    • Patient
    Rosalind Elliot
    • Miss Brown - Secretary
    Tony Parkin
    • Dickinson - Clerk
    Jack Arrow
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Alan Harris
    Alan Harris
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Guy Standeven
    Guy Standeven
    • Office Worker
    • (uncredited)
    Reg Thomason
    Reg Thomason
    • Office Worker
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Anthony Friedman
    • Writers
      • Rodney Carr-Smith
      • Anthony Friedman
      • Herman Melville
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.6452
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    Featured reviews

    Kirpianuscus

    a state

    I love Bartleby and this is the reason to see this adaptation of the gem by Melville with serious simpaty.

    Because it is not easy to create a proper portrait of the main character and the reasonable solution is only to use a large dose of subjectivity, proposing only your Bartleby. In this case, the result is just a meritous good point, John McEnery suggesting a state not so eccentric of a man refuged under the indifference veil, with, maybe, too clear perspective about life.

    The compensation - the accountant , proposed by Paul Scofield. And the clever atmosphere of 1970 ' s.

    In short, a seductive adaptation. And a fair portrait of a state of soul.
    9TakeTwoReviews

    I prefer this version.

    I LOVE Bartleby. This 1970 original is marvellous. Based on Herman Melville's classic novella, it's a work of art. A cold delicate hug of a film. It's slow meandering shots, it's wistful jazz infused score. In the 20 years since I first saw it, I've never seen anything else quite like it. Every frame is a beautiful portrait of London character and mundanity. An ode to 60s design culture, geometric modernity. In the centre of all this is Bartleby (John McEnery), a likeable yet unusual young man looking for work, purpose, meaning. He's painfully polite and good natured, but how shall we say, minimal with his communication skills. Despite this, he gets a job as an audit clerk in a drab office run by the friendly but stuffy Paul Scofield. This first interview between the two is typically awkward, but the boss has no idea what he's let himself in for. Bartleby is like no other employee he's ever had. Certainly nothing like office prankster Robin Askwith, the cheeky cocky chappy famed for his seaside titillation or Tucker (Colin Jeavons) who gives poor Bartleby such a hard time. They don't understand him you see. He has his way of doing things... and not doing things. The first indications of this coming when he's asked to bring some files and responds with the charming "I would rather not, just now", leaving his slightly dumbfounded boss unsure how to deal with him. They think he's being insubordinate, lazy even, "A bit strange". He's not though, Bartleby is focused, inquisitive, in tune with his world, his surroundings, his choices. Despite his boss's patience. Bartleby's "I'd prefer not to" refrain continues to confound his co-workers. He's civil, dignified, utterly magnetic to watch. I know it doesn't sound like it would be, it sounds totally nuts, but there's something completely arresting about it. It's partly down to the gorgeous cinematography of London's concrete vistas, partly the effortlessly cool score that accompanies these interludes to the office scenes. Mostly though it's Bartleby, McEnery is simply perfect with his unassuming poise. The tasks that Bartleby politely refuses to complete increase and his boss discovers that now not only is his employee refusing to work, he's also living in the office. There's no explanation for his behaviour, certainly none offered and the boss' patience eventually runs out, but sacking him isn't really going to work. Fair play to the boss (he really does deserve a name, such is Scofield's lovely performance) he does everything he can to help, but at the end of his tether moves offices, leaving Bartleby completely unanchored and headed only he knows where. It's an odd but captivating study of will, of social standing, of the modern workplace and our reliance on its structures. It's brilliant. Much to my horror and admittedly some intrigue, the story was revisited again in 2001. Now I'm not gonna dig in too deep again, but it's worth noting that where the 1970 film is very much based more loosely on the book, this sticks a little closer. I'm not sure that makes it any better as a film though. It has a very distinct style, a bold colour palate and an almost Lynchian tone in its simplicity... the entire cast is odd. What's most notable of course, is Bartleby, played by none other Crispin Glover. I remember seeing this on release and was really taken by Glover. He's an unusual guy himself, take a look at his Letterman interviews and did you know he release an album? It's on Spotify, have a listen. Anyway he's great here and arguably does more than McEnery in the original. He's not as haunting though. It's funnier, like a Canadian TV skit show in the early 90s. This though for me distracts from Bartleby and his preferring not to. It's almost slapstick in places. It's still worth a watch, but doesn't hold a candle to its predecessor.
    7spg-4

    Sad and unusual.

    A somewhat sad and unusual film. John McEnery is marvelous as Bartleby, you cannot help feeling sorry for him even though he does not want to be helped in any way. Paul Scofield is also perefectly cast as the sympathetic boss.
    7DC1977

    An interesting and unusual film.

    Unlike other reviewers I haven't read the book and can't comment on its success as an adaptation.

    The story is very, VERY basic. A mysterious young man, Bartleby (John McEnery) applies successfully for the position of audit clerk at a small accountancy firm in London.

    At first he works well but doesn't socialise at all with any of his colleagues. Things start to slip when the Accountant (the fabulous Paul Scofield) asks him to do a task and Bartleby replies 'I would prefer not to.' This becomes Bartleby's response to every request from now on and the Accountant becomes increasingly exasperated with his new employee. Instead of dismissing him, the well-meaning accountant shares Bartleby's work amongst his colleagues and hopes to get to the bottom of the problem.

    In allowing him to stay, the Accountant sees Bartleby's behaviour become more bizarre as he takes up residence in the office.

    Even after dismissing Bartleby, the Accountant is unable to get rid of him and he re-locates the firm to a new office in the hope of getting away from this curious young man.

    If The Accountant felt he would have heard the last of Bartleby by this stage, he is sadly mistaken.

    A story like this could result in an extremely dull film but the inventive direction from Anthony Friedman (why hasn't he done any other films?) and Scofield's superb performance prevent this from happening.

    Scofield is one of the more enigmatic figures in cinema history. Primarily a stage actor, and a highly distinguished one, he has made relatively few feature films, less than 20 in fact.

    However his limited filmography has not stopped him from winning an impressive array of screen awards including the Best Actor Oscar and three BAFTA's.

    It is very typical of Scofield that, having already won the Oscar, he turned down the Robert Mitchum role in Ryan's Daughter (a part he was better suited for than Mitchum) and opted to do a tiny little film like Bartleby.

    Although McEnery is very good in the film, he has fairly little to do and it is Scofield who carries the picture. His portrayal of a kindly yet increasingly bemused employer is excellent and the delivery of his lines e.g.

    'You're living here; you're ACTUALLY living in my office!' is superb and adds the humour needed to make this film succeed.

    I can't imagine this film getting any kind of publicity when it was first shown, no premiere at Leicester Square and subsequent nationwide release. In many ways it resembles the American Film Theatre productions of the 1970's but with a little more cinematic flair.

    Its difficult to see how this film could be expected to turn a profit and although there have been 3 subsequent film adaptations of Melville's story, I doubt very much that movies of this style and small ambition would be given the go-ahead nowadays.

    But I'm glad that Bartleby was made and that it is now available on DVD (but not yet in the UK), it's an amusing little curio that deserves to be better known.
    4robertguttman

    The problem with Bartleby

    The problem with Bartleby is not Paul Scofield or John McEnery, both of whom are fine actors. The problem is the story itself, which cannot really be updated to the present day, regardless of whether that present day be 1970 or 2001. Bartleby is a story written in the 1800s, about the 1800s, and it simply doesn't work in the present day.

    For example, there is the office in which Bartleby works. He works for a lawyer in a cold and dark office that seems more akin to that of Ebenezer Scrooge than to any bright, airy, modern-day office building. Indeed, the only window in Bartleby's office has no view because it looks out onto an airshaft.

    Then there is the nature of Bartleby's occupation. He is not, as in this version, an accountant. Indeed, his function is nowhere near so creative as that. He is, in point of fact, a scrivener in a law office. And exactly what is it that a scrivener does? He copies law documents. Bartleby is, in point of fact, nothing more than a human Xerox Machine. Bear in mind that, in the 19th century, there were no such things as word processors, Xerox Machines, carbon paper or even typewriters. A lawyer who needed to produce duplicate copies of legal documents employed scriveners to produce those copies word for word, by hand, with pen and paper. It is impossible to imagine any occupation as stupefyingly dull as that.

    By the same token, it is also impossible to imagine anyone today performing any occupation even remotely comparable to that of a 19th century scrivener. It simply doesn't, and could't, exist today. And that is precisely the point. The world of Bartleby is as different from the world of a modern office worker as the world inhabited by the whalers in Moby Dick would be from that on board a modern-day whale-catching ship. Both have changed so much since the 19th century as to be as alien as the surface of another planet.

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    Bartleby

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The church steeple that can be seen through Bartleby's office window is that of St. Vedast alias Foster in the City of London.
    • Quotes

      The Accountant: Now, Bartleby, sit down. I want to check procedures for the Prebble Account and verify our results so far. With the three of us, it will be faster.

      Bartleby: I don't feel I can. Just at the moment.

      [he exits]

      The Accountant: [the Accountant and Tucker have followed Bartleby to his office] What on Earth do you mean by this?

      Bartleby: I would prefer not to say.

      The Accountant: Prefer not to. What do you do mean, you prefer not to? Are you refusing to cooperate?

      Bartleby: I prefer not to.

      The Accountant: But. look here; this is normal practice, it's an excellent way to save work for both of you. You verify your work with the same stroke; kill two birds with one stone, as it were. Don't you?

      Bartleby: I would not like to kill two birds with one stone.

      The Accountant: It's simply common practice here. It's not unreasonable. Well?

      The Accountant: [to Tucker] What do you think of it?

      Tucker: I think he should do what you ask him to.

      The Accountant: But am I unreasonable?

      Tucker: No, Sir. Not at all. I think he's a bit round the bend.

      The Accountant: You see, Bartleby, my demands are reasonable. This office isn't exactly a slave labour camp, is it?

      [he chuckles hollowly]

      The Accountant: .

      The Accountant: Go and have lunch. Think about it.

    • Connections
      Version of Bartleby (1976)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 27, 1973 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Den tause duellen
    • Filming locations
      • Grimsby Street, Tower Hamlets, London, England, UK(The Accountant follows Bartleby to this street.)
    • Production company
      • Pantheon Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 18 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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