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  2. May 25, 1997 · Being There,” directed by Hal Ashby, is a rare and subtle bird that finds its tone and stays with it. It has the appeal of an ingenious intellectual game, in which the hero survives a series of challenges he doesn’t understand, using words that are both universal and meaningless.

  3. Over time I sometimes shift my answer to "what's your favorite movie?" - but I always come back to Being There. Such a moving film, and a true testament to the inimitable talent of Peter Sellers. You can't go wrong with anything by him or Hal Ashby.

  4. "Being There" is very enjoyable and I never seem to get tired of it. Apart from Sellers standout performance, "Being There" from every angle is an extremely well made film that holds up well to remain engaging 25 years later and is no doubt a source of pride for all involved in any regard. In short, this is a movie that, "I like to watch!"

  5. “I like to watch.”From director Hal Ashby, Being There is wildly intelligent movie about an incredibly unintelligent man. Peter Sellers stars with Shirley Ma...

    • 86 min
    • 16.3K
    • CineFix - IGN Movies and TV
    • What Happens in Being There's Ending?
    • Why Did Chance Walk on Water at The End?
    • What Was The Significance of Television?
    • Why Did Everyone Trust Chance?
    • The Real Meaning of Being There's Ending

    On his deathbed, Ben Rand confided one last time in his friend, Chance, and encouraged the mostly silent gardener to pursue his daughter, Eve. Eve then admitted her feelings for Chance and attempted to make advances on him, which he reciprocated by mimicking a scene on television. Ben Rand then died, leading Chance to show genuine sadness for the l...

    Throughout the film, Chance seemed to benefit from divine intervention on several occasions as he unknowingly rose to the heights of Washington D.C. society. The ending seemed to suggest that Chance was a memorable movie angel all along and that the supposed divine intervention was much more divine than the movie had previously established. The fin...

    Being There was a great satire of the rich, but it didn't hold back on the rest of society either when it came to making broad statements. Chance's obsession with television was evident from the very beginning, and it essentially led him along from plot point to plot point as he mimicked what he saw on screen. On the surface level, Chance's obsessi...

    One of the film's most unbelievable aspects was that a simple man could bumble his way to the presidency without really trying. In that plot detail, Being There followed along the same lines as some of the best political comedy films, with its lambasting of the crooked governmental systems. Everyone loved Chance because he was a blank slate, and on...

    Most of what happened at the end of the film was spelled out through narration, but the implications of the ending would continue far after the movie faded. Whether Chance was an angel was somewhat unimportant when it came to the meaning behind the ending, and like the rest of the story, Chance himself was merely a vessel. Being There seemed to sug...

    • Dalton Norman
    • Senior Staff Writer
  6. Hal Ashby’s “Being There” is a movie that inspires those feelings. It begins with a cockamamie notion, it’s basically one joke told for two hours, and it requires Peter Sellers to maintain an excruciatingly narrow tone of behavior in a role that has him onscreen almost constantly.

  7. Easily the crown jewel in the many-ornamented crown that is Peter Sellers' career, Hal Ashby's "Being There" is one of those incredibly subtle acts of ironical dance-work that honestly puts a lot into perspective for you the viewer.