![: The Italian Job [1969]](http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B00005UO5L.02._SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg)
Amazon.co.uk Review:
The greatest Brit-flick crime caper comedy of all time,
1969's The Italian Job towers mightily above its
latter-day mockney imitators. After Alfie but
before Get Carter Michael Caine is the hippest
ex-con around, bedding the birds (several at a time) and
spouting immortal one-liners ("You're only supposed
to blow the bloody doors off!"). The inheritor of a
devious plan to steal gold bullion in the traffic-choked
streets of Turin, Caine recruits a misfit team of genial
underworld types--including a lecherous Benny Hill and
three plummy public-schoolboy rally drivers--and uses the
occasion of an England-Italy football match as cover for
the heist.
In his final screen appearance, Noel Coward joyfully
sends up his own patriotic persona, and there are small
though priceless cameos from the likes of Irene Handl and
John Le Mesurier. But The Italian Job's real
stars are the three Mini Coopers--patriotically decorated
red, white and blue--that run rings round every other
vehicle in an immortal car-chase sequence, which
preserves forever the British public's love affair with
the little car. Quincy Jones provided the irreverent
music, naturally, while the cliffhanger ending thumbs its
nose at anything so un-hip as a resolution. It's all
unashamedly jingoistic--ridiculously, gleefully, absurdly
so--but the whole sums up the joie de vivre of
the 1960s so perfectly that future historians need only
look here to learn why the decade was swinging.
On the DVD: The Italian Job
disc contains three all-new documentaries--"The
Great Idea" (conception), "The Self-Preservation
Society" (casting), and "Get a Bloomin' Move On"
(stunts)--which dovetail into a good 68-minute "making
of" featurette. Contributors include scriptwriter
Troy Kennedy Martin and Producer Michael Deeley, who also
crops up on the sporadically interesting commentary track
with author of The Making of The Italian Job,
Matthew Field. The deleted "Blue Danube" waltz
scene is also included, with optional commentary. The
print is a decent anamorphic transfer of the original 2.35:1
ratio, and the soundtrack has been remastered to Dolby 5.1.
The animated Mini Cooper menus set the tone perfectly. --Mark
Walker
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