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Being There

Getting there is half the fun; being there is all of it!
1979 | 130m | English

(81359 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

A simple-minded gardener named Chance has spent all his life in the Washington D.C. house of an old man. When the man dies, Chance is put out on the street with no knowledge of the world except what he has learned from television.
Release Date: Dec 19, 1979
Director: Hal Ashby
Writer: Robert C. Jones, Jerzy Kosiński
Genres: Comedy, Drama
Keywords usa president, impotence, autism, identity, washington dc, usa, botanist, based on novel or book, philosophical
Production Companies United Artists, Lorimar Film Entertainment, NatWest Ventures, New Gold Entertainment, Northstar Media, BSB, CIP
Box Office Revenue: $30,177,511
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 09, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Peter Sellers Chance
Shirley MacLaine Eve Rand
Melvyn Douglas Benjamin Rand
Jack Warden President 'Bobby'
Richard Dysart Dr. Robert Allenby
Richard Basehart Vladimir Skrapinov
Ruth Attaway Louise
David Clennon Thomas Franklin
Fran Brill Sally Hayes
Denise DuBarry Johanna Franklin
Alice Hirson First Lady
Jerome Hellman Gary Burns
John Harkins Sidney Courtney
James Noble Kaufman
Mitch Kreindel Dennis Watson
Oteil Burbridge Lolo
Richard Venture Wilson
Sam Weisman Colson
Ilya Baskin Karpatov
Hal Ashby Man at File Cabinet at the Washington Post (uncredited)
Kenneth Patterson Perkins
Stanley Grover Baldwin
Name Job
Robert C. Jones Screenplay
Frank E. Warner Supervising Sound Effects Editor
Don Zimmerman Editor
Michael D. Haller Production Design
Jeff Wexler Sound Mixer
Donald O. Mitchell Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Hal Ashby Director
Jerzy Kosiński Novel, Screenplay
Johnny Mandel Original Music Composer
Caleb Deschanel Director of Photography
Lynn Stalmaster Casting
Charles H. Schram Makeup Artist
Frank Westmore Makeup Artist
Gary H. Holt Gaffer
David Hamburger First Assistant Director
Toby Lovallo Second Assistant Director
Pablo Ferro Title Designer
Nick McLean Camera Operator
May Routh Costume Designer
Robert R. Benton Set Decoration
James L. Schoppe Art Direction
Name Title
Charles Mulvehill Producer
Andrew Braunsberg Producer
Jack Schwartzman Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Director Hal Ashby Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 21 35 13
2024 5 23 41 14
2024 6 24 46 11
2024 7 22 40 11
2024 8 53 138 10
2024 9 14 26 9
2024 10 18 30 10
2024 11 18 61 8
2024 12 12 24 8
2025 1 14 22 9
2025 2 10 18 4
2025 3 5 13 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 2 0
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 2 3 2

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Reviews

FilipeManuelNeto
9.0

**Peter Sellers' big farewell in a film that highlights his more chivalrous side.** There are films that, even though they're good, cannot be consensual, and this is one of them. It's a film that conquers admirers as easily as it accumulates people who didn't understand it or didn't like it for w ... hatever reason. I confess that I liked it, but I can understand both sides. The film has qualities, but it also presents a story that is not pleasant, and that is so far-fetched that it could never actually take place in real life. The film presents a friendly character who is not easy to be indifferent to: Chance is a gardener who loves what he does and is very good at taking care of plants, but who was educated in a very informal way, confined inside a man's house. boss he served his entire life, without ever leaving, without ever going to school, without having any idea of the world around that house. The only glimpse of the world he had was through television, which he watches daily and with pleasure. When the boss dies, he is evicted from that house by lawyers who were not even aware of his existence. Without education, home or even documents, he wanders around the city and, by luck, ends up in the house of a very rich banker, ingratiating himself with his family with his adages which, however vague and inconsistent they may be, are taken as authentic pearls. of wisdom. I have no doubt that there are very wise people in the world who have never set foot in school nor know how to sign their name. These are people who, having not had the opportunity to attend education in their lives, replaced it with a rich life experience and have very valuable empirical knowledge. I know people like that. However, it is inconceivable that someone has lived their entire existence within a house where they serve without ever leaving for anything, and without having documents of any kind. The script makes a mistake here, it exaggerates its proposition, and people's reactions afterwards are equally exaggerated and unreasonable. I recognize this. However, the beauty of the tale created around the figure of this gardener, who never loses his purity, his kindness, is undeniable. And we really have to surrender to Peter Sellers' magnificent performance. The actor provides us with a discreet and elegant work in which he highlighted his best features, a restrained, almost aristocratic posture and slow, absolutely clear and well-pronounced diction. Unfortunately, he is almost the only actor to deserve a positive rating: Shirley Maclaine, Melvyn Douglas and Jack Warden are good, but they appear absolutely bland and disinterested here.

Nov 22, 2023