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The Italian Job
DVD
G (General Audience) :: Paramount ::
Released:
2003-10-07
$7.18USD
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$7.48
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Rank:
#11826
Rating:
4.5/5 (114 Reviews)
5/5
"...I'm Glad You're Out Sir...I Mean Back..."
by Mark Barry at Revival Records, West End (London, UK)
*** THIS REVIEW IS FOR THE UK "BLU RAY" VERSION OF THE FILM ***
I ripped the shrink-wrap off this little gem this morning with the glee of a six-year old delinquent given a day pass to Cadburys. I then sat down to watch it and emerged two hours later with the grin of a 51-year old Cheshire cat on Viagra.
We all know "The Italian Job" is a Sixties classic, but what you don't know is that this 40th Anniversary reissue of it (issued today 15 June 2009) is simply off the charts good...
First up is the print - which is GLORIOUS - as pristine as you could hope for and a joy from start to finish. And although it doesn't state it on the outer box, this is the fully restored British Film Institute version, which has been cleaned up frame-by-frame (and those clean shots are used in the "Making Of" extras too). One of those features is the 30th Anniversary reissue trailer from 10 years ago, which uses the famous "...doors off..." van sequence. Untouched - it's covered in scratches and has no definition whatsoever - it allows you see what the film stock did look like as opposed to how beautiful it looks now after restoration.
There are so many scenes that now stand out - as Matt Monro's cheesy song "On Days Like These" plays and the car drives through the Alps in the opening credits - when Charlie comes out of prison as he walks through the gates and Maggie Blye greets him in a stolen car from the Pakistani Embassy - when the three Mini Coopers climb the roof of the football stadium with the Italian cops in pursuit - it's just all BEAUTIFUL. The BFI have also done "Zulu", "The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner" and "Saturday Night And Sunday Morning" and this is up to the same stunning standard as they are (see my reviews).
The extras are generous too (nearly two hours worth):
1. Commentary with Screenwriter Tony Kennedy Martin and Author Matthew Field
2. Commentary by Producers Michael Deeley and Author Matthew Field
3. Mini Adventures (in HD)
4. "Self Preservation Society: The Making Off The Italian Job" (in HD) - features new interviews with the cast, writers, producers including Michel Caine, Maggie Blye, Troy Kennedy Martin, Michael Deeley, reminiscences on Noel Coward, the Director Peter Collinson, Quincy Jones on the cool score etc...
5. Music Video (in HD)
6. The Deleted Scene With Commentary by Author Matthew Field
7. Theatrical Trailer
8. Re-release Trailer
The casting of course was a mixture of luck, fate and genius - Caine perfect as Charlie Croker the likely lad, Benny Hill as the groping computer boffin, the suave yet deadly Raf Vallone as the Turin Mafia boss and Tony Beckley as the dandily dressed Camp Freddy. But the biggest coup of all was Noel Coward as Mr. Bridger - the master-criminal doing time in her Majesty's prison service. He has tea and scones, worries about the British economy and has his cell plastered with pictures of the Queen. Coward is just priceless as he lords about the decking of the prison block, "Rule Britannia" played behind him by a string quartet - it's enough to make you howl with laughter...
You see you forget how funny The Italian Job is - the catty gay tailor saying Charlie's pre-prison clothes could now be part of a museum exhibit, Coward standing beside two prison guards as they hand him his two newspapers and a toilet roll. Prison Governor John Le Mesurier's look of astonishment as Coward complains that `his' toilet has been invaded by Michael Caine (pitching the heist to him) - a man's toilet is his castle... The snooty garage manager played beautifully by John Clive counting the money Michael Caine has just given him for looking after his Aston Martin DB - it's been in his garage for two years while Caine was away in `India'. "I was shooting tigers old boy..." Garage owner counting the fifties, " ...there must have been an awful lot of tigers sir..."
The Turin locations are wonderfully colourful, the mountain scenes as crisp as those in the James Bond reissues and Caine's freckles clearer than ever - all of it - what a peach!
I've reviewed a lot of oldies on the new BLU RAY format of late - some successful, some woeful - but this is up there with the very best. In fact, as a man who adores the medium and believes in its possibilities, I suspect it'll tickle Michael Caine pink that his films "Zulu" and "The Italian Job" are both going a long way towards establishing BLU RAY as 'the' format to restore old movies to and preserve them properly. Onwards to David Lean boys...
As you can tell - and if you'll forgive the pun - I was blown away.
Loved it, loved it, loved it. Recommended - big time.
PS: "The Italian Job" is yet to receive a 'US' issue on BLU RAY, but if your player is all regions, it will play it anyway - check your machine's specs...
5/5
Classic With Michael Caine At His Youthful Best
by Mike C. Buckley (Oakland, CA USA)
Don't bother with the recent glitzy remake. The classic 1969 version starring Caine and Noel Coward as well as a bunch of other great actors in cameos is way, way better. Actually, the stars of the 1969 film are three Mini Cooper autos which the gang use to carry away the loot and out maneuver (NOT outrun) the cops. The remake is all special effects and edginess. The Caine film is all live action, full of suspense and hugely funny. Coward as the English mob boss is iconic. And it ends ambiguously! What recent film about a bank robbery would dare to let you imagine what happens after the film ends? There would be a shoot out and someone would win. This is so much better. You'll spend an hour arguing about it. Get this for your collection before it is no longer available.
4/5
A Great Classic!
by Stephen G. Bernard (New Hampshire)
I wanted to own this great title. They never show it on TV since the remake came out. I played it on my PS3 which upconverted it to near Hi-Def and it was great! Fun movie and better that the remake which was still pretty good.
I don't often buy movies so this one is a keeper.
5/5
Classic British comedy
by Jerry Saperstein (Evanston, IL USA)
This is a classic British comedy from the time when Alec Guiness, Michael Caine, Peter Sellers and other British comic actors (as differentiated from comedians) ruled the roost.
The story is simple. Michael Caine is released from jail. A colleague of is murdered in Italy and his not-terribly-grieving widow brings Caine a message - on film, no less. The sight of Michael Caine sitting next to a film projector watching the outline of the planned heist is hilarious in this day of digital cameras and video iPods.
The story involves Caine getting the permission and assistance of Mr. Bridger, a crime boss who leads a life of luxury behind the walls, recruiting a gang and making arrangements to steal a $ 4-million dollar gold shipment in Turin, Italy. (Four million sounds so small these days, doesn't it?)
The story, frankly, is very thin. This is comedy, not drama. The real pleasure comes in the execution of the heist. A rogue "computer expert" (a hilarious Benny Hill doing his usual schtick) substitutes a tape - yes, a tape - at the traffic control center, which in turn sets off a massive traffic jam.
The armored convoy carrying the gold is trapped in the midst of this jam and the rest of the film is occupied with the getaway. The getaway features a classic, very funny and very long car chase. Again, this is a comedy, not drama and almost cartoon-like . . . and great fun.
The ending comes as a bit of a surprise and leaves the audience hanging, so to speak.
All in all, a fun film. Funny almost as much for how dated it seems as it is for the humor of it. A fun way to idle away 90 or so minutes while looking back at life in a much simpler time when moviemakers didn't take themselves so seriously.
Jerry
5/5
Better than the re-make
by Honeybunch (Colorado)
Michael Caine is smashing! Always understated, yet he has the ability to stand out from everyone else on screen. This original screenplay was made on a shoestring, but did not miss a beat. When a movie is this good, there is no reason to re-make it. At first, I was disappointed with the ending, but if you watch the commentary version, you will understand that it was deliberately designed for a sequel, which never happened. Too bad. The movie has you wanting more of their antics.
The Italian Job Summary
A British Crook Robs Gold Ingots In Italy By Having A Computer Expert Cause A Traffic Jam.
Internal countercasting is a big plus in this caper comedy: where else are you going to find Benny Hill and Michael Caine in the same movie? Peter Collinson directs those two as well as Noel Coward, Raf Vallone, Rossano Brazzi, and Irene Handl in a story about the effort to steal gold bullion from the town of Turin. Screenwriter Troy Kennedy Martin eschews heist film tradition by placing more emphasis on the gang's getaway than on the complex robbery itself. The film's main claim to comic fame is a wild chase scene set against an enormous traffic jam. The rest of the movie is less memorable, but that extended action sequence is well worth the wait.
--Tom Keogh
Italian Job DVD Techincal Details
Cast:
Michael Caine
,
Benny Hill
,
Raf Vallone
,
Tony Beckley
Director:
Peter Collinson
Aspect Ratio:
2.35:1
Rated:
G (General Audience)
Running Time:
99 mins
UPC:
097360505542
Binding:
DVD
Studio:
Paramount
Release Date:
2003-10-07
Region Code:
1
Specs:
Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
Language & Subtitles
English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled),
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