Butley (1974)

  • Year: 1974
  • Released: 01 Apr 1976
  • Country: United Kingdom, Canada, United States
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071260/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/butley
  • Available in: 720p,
  • Language: English
  • MPA Rating: R
  • Genre: Drama, Romance
  • Runtime: 94 min
  • Writer: Simon Gray
  • Director: Harold Pinter
  • Cast: Alan Bates, Jessica Tandy, Richard O’Callaghan
  • Keywords: lgbt, based on play or musical, college, alcohol, english professor,
6.8/10
62% – Audience

Butley Storyline

A day in the life of Ben Butley. But definitely not a day to remember for this T.S. Eliot scholar at the University of London. Let’s take for example Anne, his already estranged wife: today is the day she has chosen to tell him she is leaving him for good, and for a man Butley despises, and what about Joey Kingston, whose close friendship Ben is losing, maybe forever today? Decidedly, all the odds are against him. Will Butley, the bitter misanthropist, the unrepentant alcoholic, the teacher who bullies his students, his friends, and his colleagues, in other words, the self-destructive nihilist, survive this horrible day?

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Butley Movie Reviews

Literary virtuosity

One of the primary reasons for seeing this adaptation of ‘Butley’ is that it is one of the thirteen films making up the American Film Theatre series, which was an interesting and ambitious project but a flawed one. It is hard to go wrong with having a fine actor like Alan Bates, who sounded perfect and did two other films in the series (the others being ‘Three Sisters’ and ‘In Celebration’). The play is good fun and Harold Pinter as director intrigued me, knowing him better for his play and screen writing.

‘Butley’ more than does the source material justice, managing to be faithful in detail and spirit to it without being too much so. It is easily one of the top 3 best films in the American Film Theatre series along with ‘The Iceman Cometh’ and ‘The Homecoming’ (the latter of which being written by Pinter and one of his finest plays) and by quite some way the best since ‘The Homecoming’. It is highly recommended and has more to it than just curiosity value.

Pinter’s direction is a little too laconic on occasion, which meant that the energy wasn’t always consistent (this was fleetingly though).

A vast majority of it though is absolutely fine, very intelligent, precise and not losing the play’s necessary exuberance. The script is talk-heavy, as is expected from a play, but it doesn’t feel wordy. Instead it felt sharp, smart and amusing in a dark but never distasteful way.

It’s a well shot and produced film, with not near as much of a too filmed play feel that most films in the American Film Theatre series suffer from. The energy is near constant. Once again the characters are deeply flawed but not one’s definition of likeable (not a problem for me but this has been a criticism that has popped up in reviews for most of the series’ films), but they are meaty and feel real.

While Jessica Tandy and Simon O’Callaghan are both excellent, the best thing about ‘Butley’ is the intense and exuberant tour de force performance from Bates.

Concluding, great and one of the series’ best. 9/10.

Astonishing virtuosity

The American Film Theatre was a praiseworthy effort to present classic modern plays to a wide audience. The series petered out when it became clear that there was in fact not enough of an audience to make the venture viable. This left us with a group of films, or rather filmed plays, of varying quality but always interesting, if not only for the wonderful casts assembled for the series. “Butley” was one of the best. After years of oblivion, the series is finally and thankfully being released.

The problem with Simon Gray’s very engaging play is that the characters are people one would hardly want to meet. They are a deeply flawed, unlikable bunch. As such we have little sympathy for any of them and hence Gray, intentionally or not, does not allow the viewer to connect emotionally with his characters. He instead allows us to watch as Ben Butley’s life slowly disintegrates before our eyes. Despite the enforced detachment, it still remains a fascinating process, thanks to Pinter’s precise direction, Gray’s very sharp dialogue and Alan Bates delivering an astonishingly virtuoso performance.

It’s one of those extremely rare performances in which the actor becomes completely engulfed by the character. It’s a feat to behold; almost scary at times. This alone makes “Butley” an unforgettable experience.

The brilliance of Alan Bates, who was Simon Gray’s “muse and alter-ego”

Simon Gray’s extremely talky, darkly comic 1971 play is cinematized here, direct from the text, for television’s American Film Theatre.

Doughy-faced and feckless-looking Alan Bates gives a bravura, nonstop performance as the eponymous sloppy, over-literate, misanthropic, washed-up English professor at the University of London. He is an unlikeable character, so there’s no sympathizing with him; it’s more like watching a train wreck.

But Bates inhabits the role fiercely, and makes him entertaining and lively — and at times funny — enough to hold our attention for the two-hour performance, 95% of which takes place in a single room. The room is Butley’s office, which he shares with his longterm young lover Joey, now an assistant lecturer.

“Butley” feels a bit like Albee’s “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”, which was written nine years prior to Gray’s play. Butley’s verbal diatribes go for the jugular, but in allusive, literary or nursery-rhymey, uber-rhetorical, abstract, indirect, and bitterly sarcastic ways. It’s a lot to pay attention to — especially the literary quotes and allusions. And sometimes it’s a bit much watching a man go through a slow meltdown in the guise of skewering anyone and everyone around him: Joey, his ex-wife, his students and colleagues, Joey’s new love interest, and anyone who even tries to get close to or talk reason to him.

What seems like it might become unrelieved verbal cruelty is thankfully mitigated from time to time by the thoughtful, intelligent, gentle integrity of Joey (wonderfully played by Richard O’Callaghan, who, like Bates, originated his role), and by some real laugh-out-loud moments, and by a character or two who seem for a time to beat Butley at his own cruel mind games.

In the end, the play seems to come full circle metaphorically, giving the audience at least a sense of symmetry and unity and finally quietude before it closes. A worthwhile watch if you like cinematized plays or want more of the very impressive Alan Bates.