Film Review
How to Steal a Million was the
last of three films which Audrey Hepburn made with director William
Wyler, after
Roman Holiday (1953) and
The Children's Hour (1961) and
is the last of Wyler's comedies, made towards the very end of his
illustrious career. Although panned by the critics on its initial
release, the film has matured well, like an old wine or good cheese,
and today it rates as one of Hepburn's most delightful comedies, a
seductively smooth melange of romantic comedy and caper movie.
The pairing of Hepburn with Peter O'Toole was daring at the time
(particularly as the latter had yet to prove himself as a comic
performer) but proves to be inspired. Not only do the two actors
have a sizzling on-screen chemistry but they also have a similar talent
for underplayed comedy, which pays dividends in their show-stopping
scenes together. The excellent supporting cast includes
Hugh Griffith, hilarious as the goggle-eyed art forger, and Eli Wallach
as an over-enthusiastic art collector. Shot in France, the cast
includes several notable French actors of the period, including Charles
Boyer, Fernand Gravey, Marcel Dalio and Jacques Marin, the latter of
whom almost steals the show as the hard pressed (and unbelievably
stupid) museum chief guard.
The film's centrepiece is of course the heist sequence, which is every
bit as ingenious and intricately plotted as that of Jules Dassin's
Rififi (1955), only much, much
funnier. Particularly memorable is the sequence in which O'Toole
frees himself when he manages to get himself trapped in a tiny cupboard
with Miss Hepburn (something that stretches credulity to its limit -
who would
want to escape in
that predicament?). Whilst it may have been scrupulously
innocent on paper, O'Toole and Hepburn bring a sultry eroticism to this
scene that surpasses anything seen in the entire series of
Emmanuelle films. After this,
the theft of the statue is pretty well an anti-climax, albeit a
despicably funny one.
How to
Steal a Million may not be the most sophisticated comedy but
what it lacks in depth and intellectual rigour it more than makes up
for in good old-fashioned charm and ebullient sixties-style comedy. The "Papa" - "Nicole" exchanges in
this film are what inspired that seemingly interminable run of Renault
Clio TV ads of the 1990s, proving that imitation is not only the
sincerest form of flattery, but also a very effective way to boost your
profit margin.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next William Wyler film:
Funny Girl (1968)
Film Synopsis
Charles Bonnet is one of France's leading art forgers and makes a
comfortable living by auctioning off his fake works of art, much to the
chagrin of his daughter Nicole, who is certain that one day this scam
will be uncovered. The pride of Bonnet's collection is a copy of
a Cellini statuette, which was forged by his father and which he has
generously loaned out to one of Paris's most secure art
galleries. When Nicole learns that the statuette is to be
subjected to a technical examination to establish its authenticity, she
is thrown into a panic. Out of desperation, she appeals to Simon Dermott, a
young burglar who recently broke into her house, and
persuades him to help her steal the Cellini replica before it is shown
to be a fake. Unfortunately for Nicole, Simon is not what
he seems...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.