

A 6-minute power trip where standing still becomes devastating political theater.
An autocratic Director (Harold Pinter) and his Assistant (Rebecca Pidgeon) put the final touches to the last scene of some kind of dramatic presentation, which consists entirely of a man (John Gielgud) standing still onstage.
Acting
Gielgud's silent, trembling resistance without moving a muscle.
Writing
Pinter's brutal dialogue packs six minutes with decades of dread.

Director
David Mamet
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Pinter wrote this in 1982 as a response to Polish martial law crackdowns; Mamet's adaptation arrived weeks before 9/11, accidentally making it prescient again.
Gielgud was 96 and nearly blind during filming — he couldn't see Pinter at all, making his distant staring genuinely involuntary until the final gesture.