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Michael Caine Movies

Want to know the best Michael Caine movies?  How about the worst Michael Caine movies?  Curious about Michael Caine box office grosses or which Michael Caine movie picked up the most Oscar® nominations? Need to know which Michael Caine movie got the best reviews from critics and audiences? Well you have come to the right place….because we have all of that information.

My father introduced me to Michael Caine (1933-) in the movie The Man Who Would Be King. Since that 1975 movie I have followed his career very closely. I am probably one of the few people on Earth who not only saw The Swarm at the theater but also Beyond the Poseidon Adventure  at the theater. After years of struggling as an actor, in the mid 1960s he finally became a star with the British films Zulu, Alfie, and Ipcress Files.  Since then he has starred in roughly 90 movies.  Over the years Caine has received 6 Oscar® nominations and 2 Oscar® wins.  Not only is he still popular after a 60 plus year career but he is still appearing in some the biggest movies out there (Inception, Batman trilogy). Currently he is director Christopher Nolan’s good luck charm.  Caine has appeared in the last 7 Nolan films (he has an uncredited voice role in 2017’s Dunkirk).

His IMDb page shows over 170 acting credits since 1956.  In the table below, Ultimate Movie Rankings ranks his movies in 6 different sortable columns.  Television roles, cameos, shorts and straight to DVD movies were not included in the rankings.

Michael Caine in 2006's Children of Men
Michael Caine in 2006’s Children of Men

Michael Caine Movies Ranked In Chronological Order With Ultimate Movie Rankings Score (1 to 5 UMR Tickets) *Best combo of box office, reviews and awards.

Year Movie (Year) Rating S
Year Movie (Year) Rating S
2008 The Dark Knight (2008)
2017 Dunkirk (2017)
AA Best Picture Nom
Voice Only
2010 Inception (2010)
AA Best Picture Nom
1975 The Man Who Would Be King (1975)
1966 Alfie (1966)
AA Best Picture Nom
AA Best Actor Nom
2012 The Dark Knight Rises (2012)
2014 Interstellar (2014)
2005 Batman Begins (2005)
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters (1986)
AA Best Picture Nom
AA Best Supp Actor Win
2014 Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014)
1999 The Cider House Rules (1999)
AA Best Picture Nom
AA Best Supp Actor Win
1977 A Bridge Too Far (1977)
1972 Sleuth (1972)
AA Best Actor Nom
1980 Dressed to Kill (1980)
2002 Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002)
1978 California Suite (1978)
2011 Cars 2 (2011)
Voice Only
1988 Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988)
1965 The Ipcress File (1965)
2006 The Prestige (2006)
2013 Now You See Me (2013)
2006 Children of Men (2006)
2000 Miss Congeniality (2000)
2011 Gnomeo & Juliet (2011)
Voice Only
2020 Tenet (2020)
1964 Zulu (1964)
2003 Secondhand Lions (2003)
2012 Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (2012)
1966 Gambit (1966)
1983 Educating Rita (1983)
AA Best Actor Nom
1969 The Italian Job (1969)
1992 The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)
1971 Get Carter (1971)
1982 Deathtrap (1982)
2002 The Quiet American (2002)
AA Best Actor Nom
1986 Mona Lisa (1986)
2016 Now You See Me 2 (2016)
1976 The Eagle Has Landed (1976)
1969 Battle of Britain (1969)
1966 Funeral in Berlin (1966)
2000 Quills (2000)
1980 The Island (1980)
1981 Victory (1981)
2001 Last Orders (2001)
1994 On Deadly Ground (1994)
1967 Hurry Sundown (1967)
2017 Going In Style (2017)
2023 The Great Escaper (2023)
Limited Release
1998 Little Voice (1998)
2015 Youth (2015)
1966 The Wrong Box (1966)
1970 Too Late The Hero (1970)
2005 Bewitched (2005)
1971 The Last Valley (1971)
1976 Harry and Walter Go to New York (1976)
1987 The Fourth Protocol (1987)
1990 A Shock to the System (1990)
2005 The Weather Man (2005)
1997 Mandela and de Klerk (1997)
Showtime Movies
1986 Sweet Liberty (1986)
2009 Harry Brown (2009)
1972 Pulp (1972)
1988 Without a Clue (1988)
1969 Play Dirty (1969)
1992 Noises Off... (1992)
2008 Is Anybody There? (2008)
1967 Billion Dollar Brain (1967)
2007 Flawless (2007)
1990 Mr. Destiny (1990)
2022 Medieval (2022)
1986 The Whistle Blower (1986)
1957 How to Murder a Rich Uncle (1957)
2014 Stonehearst Asylum (2014)
1996 Blood and Wine (1996)
1967 Woman Times Seven (1967)
2021 Best Sellers (2021)
Limited Release
2013 Last Love (2013)
2018 Sherlock Gnomes (2018)
Voice Only
1968 The Magus (1968)
1998 Curtain Call (1998)
Starz!
1975 The Romantic Englishwoman (1975)
1975 The Wilby Conspiracy (1975)
2000 Shiner (2000)
1968 Deadfall (1968)
1974 The Destructors/The Marseille Contract (1974)
2018 King of Thieves (2018)
1983 Beyond the Limit (1983)
1986 Half Moon Street (1986)
1972 X, Y and Zee (1972)
1975 Peeper (1975)
1978 The Swarm (1978)
1971 Kidnapped (1971)
1999 The Debtors (1999)
1992 Blue Ice (1992)
HBO Movie
1983 The Jigsaw Man (1983)
1984 Blame it on Rio (1984)
2007 Sleuth (2007)
2020 Four Kids And It (2020)
Voice Only
2017 Dear Dictator (2017)
2015 The Last Witch Hunter (2015)
2020 Come Away (2020)
1985 The Holcroft Covenant (1985)
1974 The Black Windmill (1974)
1990 Bullseye! (1990)
1979 Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (1979)
1979 Ashanti (1979)
2004 Around the Bend (2004)
1987 Jaws: The Revenge (1987)
2021 Twist (2021)
2003 The Statement (2003)
1985 Water (1985)
2000 Get Carter (2000)
1987 Surrender (1987)
1977 Silver Bears (1977)
1981 The Hand (1981)

Michael Caine Movies Can Be Ranked 6 Ways In This Table

The really cool thing about this table is that it is “user-sortable”. Rank the movies anyway you want.

  • Sort Michael Caine movies by movie titles and trailers
  • Sort Michael Caine movies by co-stars of his movies
  • Sort Michael Caine movies by adjusted domestic box office grosses using current movie ticket cost (in millions)
  • Sort Michael Caine movies by yearly dometic box office rank
  • Sort Michael Caine movies how they were received by critics and audiences.  60% rating or higher should indicate a good movie
  • Sort by how many Oscar® nominations and how many Oscar® wins each Michael Caine movie received.
  • Sort Michael Caine movies by Ultimate Movie Rankings (UMR) Score.  UMR Score puts box office, reviews and awards into a mathematical equation and gives each movie a score.
  • Blue Link in Co-Star column will take you to that star’s UMR movie page
R Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links Adj. B.O. Worldwide (mil) Review Oscar Nom / Win UMR Score
R Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links Actual B.O. Domestic (mil) Adj. B.O. Domestic (mil) Adj. B.O. Worldwide (mil) B.O. Rank by Year Review Oscar Nom / Win UMR Score S
1 The Dark Knight (2008) Charlize Theron &
Paul Rudd
533.30 928.5 1,746.20 1 95 08 / 02 99.7
3 Dunkirk (2017)
AA Best Picture Nom
Voice Only
Tom Hardy 190.10 264.9 734.80 14 89 08 / 03 99.7
2 Inception (2010)
AA Best Picture Nom
Leonardo DiCaprio &
Tom Hardy
292.60 463.5 1,307.90 6 86 08 / 04 99.6
8 The Man Who Would Be King (1975) Sean Connery &
Christopher Plummer
33.30 203.3 203.30 16 87 04 / 00 98.8
4 Alfie (1966)
AA Best Picture Nom
AA Best Actor Nom
Shelley Winters 21.20 241.5 241.50 11 79 05 / 00 98.7
4 The Dark Knight Rises (2012) Christian Bale &
Tom Hardy
458.10 719.4 1,718.70 2 88 00 / 00 98.6
5 Interstellar (2014) Matthew McConaughey &
Anne Hathaway
188.00 287.7 1,032.90 16 81 05 / 01 98.2
6 Batman Begins (2005) Christian Bale &
Liam Neeson
205.30 401.1 727.90 8 82 01 / 00 97.7
10 Hannah and Her Sisters (1986)
AA Best Picture Nom
AA Best Supp Actor Win
Woody Allen &
Maureen O'Sullivan
35.40 119.2 119.20 30 90 07 / 03 96.9
12 Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014) Samuel L. Jackson &
Colin Firth
128.30 196.2 634.00 23 73 00 / 00 95.0
12 The Cider House Rules (1999)
AA Best Picture Nom
AA Best Supp Actor Win
Charlize Theron &
Paul Rudd
57.50 142.2 218.70 41 76 07 / 02 94.9
9 A Bridge Too Far (1977) Gene Hackman &
Robert Redford
56.80 318.1 318.10 9 70 00 / 00 94.5
13 Sleuth (1972)
AA Best Actor Nom
Laurence Olivier 17.40 128.1 128.10 23 89 04 / 00 94.4
16 Dressed to Kill (1980) Angie Dickinson 34.80 167.5 167.50 23 77 00 / 00 93.6
14 Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002) Mike Myers 213.30 459.7 639.30 7 62 00 / 00 91.9
17 California Suite (1978) Jane Fonda &
Richard Pryor
42.90 229.2 229.20 13 55 03 / 01 90.8
17 Cars 2 (2011)
Voice Only
Owen Wilson 191.50 301.8 886.10 8 56 00 / 00 89.8
20 Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988) Steve Martin &
Glenne Headly
42.00 127.9 127.90 24 78 00 / 00 89.2
18 The Ipcress File (1965) Nigel Green 8.10 99.4 99.40 36 85 00 / 00 88.9
21 The Prestige (2006) Scarlett Johansson &
Hugh Jackman
53.10 100.9 208.40 61 81 02 / 00 88.3
23 Now You See Me (2013) Morgan Freeman &
Woody Harrelson
117.70 181.0 540.80 27 57 00 / 00 87.7
22 Children of Men (2006) Clive Owen &
Julianne Moore
35.60 67.5 132.90 87 90 03 / 00 87.7
22 Miss Congeniality (2000) Sandra Bullock 106.80 247.7 493.40 21 50 00 / 00 87.0
26 Gnomeo & Juliet (2011)
Voice Only
Emily Blunt &
Jason Statham
100.00 157.6 305.70 31 57 00 / 00 84.8
25 Tenet (2020) John David Washington &
Robert Pattinson
57.90 78.9 492.90 8 77 02 / 01 84.5
24 Zulu (1964) Stanley Baker &
Richard Burton
4.00 53.6 53.60 71 86 00 / 00 83.7
27 Secondhand Lions (2003) Robert Duvall &
Haley Joel Osment
42.10 87.2 99.30 69 73 00 / 00 82.3
31 Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (2012) Dwayne Johnson 103.90 163.1 526.50 30 50 00 / 00 82.1
28 Gambit (1966) Shirley MacLaine 6.20 71.0 71.00 44 74 03 / 00 81.6
30 Educating Rita (1983)
AA Best Actor Nom
Julia Walters 14.60 58.1 58.10 49 77 03 / 00 81.0
30 The Italian Job (1969) Noel Coward 6.60 57.8 57.80 41 79 00 / 00 80.8
31 The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) Muppets 27.30 82.2 82.20 47 71 00 / 00 80.1
32 Get Carter (1971) Britt Ekland 3.90 29.8 29.80 73 82 00 / 00 77.3
36 Deathtrap (1982) Christopher Reeve &
Dyan Cannon
19.30 82.0 82.00 38 65 00 / 00 76.7
34 The Quiet American (2002)
AA Best Actor Nom
Brendan Fraser 13.00 28.0 59.60 135 80 01 / 00 75.7
36 Mona Lisa (1986) Bob Hoskins 5.80 19.5 19.50 98 82 01 / 00 75.3
38 Now You See Me 2 (2016) Mark Ruffalo &
Woody Harelson
65.10 94.0 484.00 49 60 00 / 00 75.3
39 The Eagle Has Landed (1976) Robert Duvall &
Donald Sutherland
13.60 80.0 80.00 49 60 00 / 00 72.0
39 Battle of Britain (1969) Laurence Olivier &
Christopher Plummer
5.70 50.3 50.30 47 69 00 / 00 71.7
40 Funeral in Berlin (1966) Guy Doleman 4.40 49.7 49.70 59 69 00 / 00 70.8
41 Quills (2000) Kate Winslet &
Joaquin Phoenix
7.10 16.4 41.70 132 76 03 / 00 69.6
42 The Island (1980) David Warner 15.70 75.6 75.60 51 58 00 / 00 68.4
43 Victory (1981) Sylvester Stallone 10.90 48.8 48.80 72 66 00 / 00 67.0
41 Last Orders (2001) Helen Mirren &
Bob Hoskins
2.30 5.2 15.20 175 79 00 / 00 66.2
48 On Deadly Ground (1994) Steven Seagal 38.60 118.2 118.20 37 42 00 / 00 65.7
51 Hurry Sundown (1967) Jane Fonda &
Faye Dunaway
10.10 104.6 104.60 29 47 00 / 00 65.4
47 Going In Style (2017) Morgan Freeman &
Alan Arkin
45.00 62.7 118.30 60 60 00 / 00 65.2
43 The Great Escaper (2023)
Limited Release
Glenda Jackson 0.10 0.1 6.60 290 79 00 / 00 65.1
44 Little Voice (1998) Brenda Blethyn &
Ewan McGregor
4.60 12.3 12.30 149 74 01 / 00 64.4
50 Youth (2015) Jane Fonda 2.70 4.0 35.60 156 75 01 / 00 62.4
51 The Wrong Box (1966) Peter Sellers 0.90 10.1 10.10 127 74 00 / 00 61.9
52 Too Late The Hero (1970) Cliff Robertson &
Henry Fonda
2.60 20.8 20.80 94 70 00 / 00 61.5
54 Bewitched (2005) Shirley MacLaine &
Nicole Kidman
63.30 123.7 256.70 41 37 00 / 00 61.0
51 The Last Valley (1971) Omar Sharif 2.30 17.7 17.70 108 70 00 / 00 59.4
57 Harry and Walter Go to New York (1976) James Caan &
Diane Keaton
13.90 81.8 81.80 48 49 00 / 00 59.2
56 The Fourth Protocol (1987) Pierce Brosnan 12.40 39.7 39.70 77 61 00 / 00 56.6
57 A Shock to the System (1990) Samuel L. Jackson 3.40 10.1 10.10 132 70 00 / 00 55.7
58 The Weather Man (2005) Nicolas Cage 12.50 24.4 37.20 141 65 00 / 00 55.4
57 Mandela and de Klerk (1997)
Showtime Movies
Sidney Poitier 0.10 0.1 0.10 285 71 00 / 00 52.5
63 Sweet Liberty (1986) Lillian Gish &
Alan Alda
14.20 47.9 47.90 58 55 00 / 00 51.0
58 Harry Brown (2009) Emily Mortimer 1.80 3.0 3.00 183 69 00 / 00 50.9
59 Pulp (1972) Mickey Rooney 2.70 20.1 20.10 99 64 00 / 00 50.6
62 Without a Clue (1988) Ben Kingsley 8.50 26.0 26.00 99 62 00 / 00 50.3
64 Play Dirty (1969) Nigel Green 1.40 12.6 12.60 125 65 00 / 00 48.7
65 Noises Off... (1992) John Ritter 2.30 6.9 6.90 146 64 00 / 00 42.5
66 Is Anybody There? (2008) Bill Milner 2.00 3.5 3.50 190 64 00 / 00 41.1
69 Billion Dollar Brain (1967) Karl Malden &
Donald Sutherland
3.80 38.7 38.70 63 52 00 / 00 38.8
67 Flawless (2007) Demi Moore 1.20 2.2 12.40 209 62 00 / 00 35.8
72 Mr. Destiny (1990) James Belushi 15.40 45.4 45.40 80 49 00 / 00 35.5
69 Medieval (2022) Ben Foster 1.40 1.5 4.90 118 62 00 / 00 34.9
69 The Whistle Blower (1986) John Gielgud 1.50 5.1 5.10 158 61 00 / 00 34.2
70 How to Murder a Rich Uncle (1957) Charles Coburn and Wendy Hiller 0.10 3.2 3.20 212 61 00 / 00 33.5
71 Stonehearst Asylum (2014) Ben Kingsley &
Kate Beckinsale
0.10 0.1 4.90 333 62 00 / 00 32.7
72 Blood and Wine (1996) Jack Nicholson 1.10 3.1 3.10 197 61 00 / 00 32.5
76 Woman Times Seven (1967) Shirley MacLaine &
Peter Sellers
2.20 23.2 23.20 91 54 00 / 00 32.3
73 Best Sellers (2021)
Limited Release
Aubrey Plaza 0.10 0.1 0.40 274 61 00 / 00 32.1
75 Last Love (2013) Jane Alexander 0.10 0.1 3.00 307 60 00 / 00 28.7
80 Sherlock Gnomes (2018)
Voice Only
Johnny Depp &
James McAvoy
43.20 59.0 118.50 69 41 00 / 00 28.2
80 The Magus (1968) Anthony Quinn 2.90 27.3 27.30 97 51 00 / 00 28.2
78 Curtain Call (1998)
Starz!
Maggie Smith 0.00 0.1 0.10 354 59 00 / 00 27.6
82 The Romantic Englishwoman (1975) Glenda Jackson 2.80 17.1 17.10 92 53 00 / 00 26.0
84 The Wilby Conspiracy (1975) Sidney Poitier 3.00 18.5 18.50 88 52 00 / 00 25.7
83 Shiner (2000) Martin Landau 0.10 0.1 0.30 268 57 00 / 00 24.7
85 Deadfall (1968) Giovanna Ralli 1.00 9.0 23.10 148 54 00 / 00 24.4
84 The Destructors/The Marseille Contract (1974) Anthony Quinn &
James Mason
0.50 3.2 3.20 148 56 00 / 00 24.2
86 King of Thieves (2018) Michael Gambon 0.10 0.1 11.00 461 57 00 / 00 23.3
87 Beyond the Limit (1983) Richard Gere 6.00 23.8 23.80 81 49 00 / 00 23.0
86 Half Moon Street (1986) Sigourney Weaver 1.10 3.8 3.80 171 55 00 / 00 22.8
89 X, Y and Zee (1972) Elizabeth Taylor 5.00 36.4 36.40 64 45 00 / 00 22.2
92 Peeper (1975) Natalie Wood 2.40 14.8 14.80 107 50 00 / 00 19.5
95 The Swarm (1978) Richard Widmark &
Olivia de Havilland
17.10 91.4 91.40 41 25 01 / 00 19.1
91 Kidnapped (1971) Trevor Howard 1.10 8.0 8.00 154 52 00 / 00 19.0
89 The Debtors (1999) Randy Quaid 0.00 0.1 0.10 343 54 00 / 00 18.8
93 Blue Ice (1992)
HBO Movie
Ian Holm 0.10 0.2 0.20 226 54 00 / 00 18.4
93 The Jigsaw Man (1983) Laurence Olivier 0.50 2.0 2.00 142 53 00 / 00 17.7
98 Blame it on Rio (1984) Demi Moore 18.60 69.4 69.40 56 31 00 / 00 16.2
95 Sleuth (2007) Jude Law 0.30 0.6 8.90 259 52 00 / 00 15.5
97 Four Kids And It (2020)
Voice Only
Matthew Goode 0.10 0.1 1.00 189 52 00 / 00 15.1
97 Dear Dictator (2017) Katie Holmes &
Odeya Rush
0.10 0.1 0.10 314 51 00 / 00 14.5
100 The Last Witch Hunter (2015) Vin Diesel 27.40 40.6 217.90 83 38 00 / 00 14.2
101 Come Away (2020) Angelina Jolie 0.20 0.2 0.80 78 50 00 / 00 13.3
102 The Holcroft Covenant (1985) Anthony Edwards 0.40 1.4 1.40 171 49 00 / 00 12.7
102 The Black Windmill (1974) Donald Pleasance 1.60 10.6 10.60 116 45 00 / 00 10.8
104 Bullseye! (1990) Roger Moore &
John Cleese
0.00 0.1 0.10 248 47 00 / 00 10.1
107 Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (1979) Sally Field 5.50 27.5 27.50 78 37 01 / 00 8.7
106 Ashanti (1979) William Holden 1.70 8.5 8.50 127 43 00 / 00 8.1
105 Around the Bend (2004) Christopher Walken &
Glenne Headly
0.20 0.4 0.40 254 45 00 / 00 8.0
111 Jaws: The Revenge (1987) Lorraine Gary 20.80 66.4 165.90 53 24 00 / 00 7.7
108 Twist (2021) Rafferty Law 0.10 0.1 0.60 266 44 00 / 00 6.6
109 The Statement (2003) Tilda Swinton 0.80 1.6 2.20 195 43 00 / 00 6.4
110 Water (1985) Valerie Perrine 0.50 1.8 4.40 165 41 00 / 00 4.9
112 Get Carter (2000) Sylvester Stallone 15.00 34.7 45.00 114 29 00 / 00 4.3
113 Surrender (1987) Lorraine Gary 5.70 18.3 18.30 100 32 00 / 00 3.3
114 Silver Bears (1977) Martin Balsam &
Jay Leno
0.90 5.3 5.30 136 33 00 / 00 1.7
115 The Hand (1981) Directed by Oliver Stone 2.40 11.0 11.00 109 30 00 / 00 1.4
Michael Caine in 1964’s Zulu

Our Personal Top Ten Michael Caine Movies

Adjusted Michael Caine Adjusted Worldwide Box Office Grosses 

Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links World-Wide Box Office Adjusted (mil) S
Movie (Year) UMR Co-Star Links World-Wide Box Office Adjusted (mil) S
The Dark Knight (2008) Charlize Theron &
Paul Rudd
1,746.20
The Dark Knight Rises (2012) Christian Bale &
Tom Hardy
1,718.70
Inception (2010)
AA Best Picture Nom
Leonardo DiCaprio &
Tom Hardy
1,307.90
Interstellar (2014) Matthew McConaughey &
Anne Hathaway
1,032.90
Cars 2 (2011)
Voice Only
Owen Wilson 886.10
Dunkirk (2017)
AA Best Picture Nom
Voice Only
Tom Hardy 734.80
Batman Begins (2005) Christian Bale &
Liam Neeson
727.90
Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002) Mike Myers 639.30
Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014) Samuel L. Jackson &
Colin Firth
634.00
Now You See Me (2013) Morgan Freeman &
Woody Harrelson
540.80
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (2012) Dwayne Johnson 526.50
Miss Congeniality (2000) Sandra Bullock 493.40
Tenet (2020) John David Washington &
Robert Pattinson
492.90
Now You See Me 2 (2016) Mark Ruffalo &
Woody Harelson
484.00
Gnomeo & Juliet (2011)
Voice Only
Emily Blunt &
Jason Statham
305.70
Bewitched (2005) Shirley MacLaine &
Nicole Kidman
256.70
The Cider House Rules (1999)
AA Best Picture Nom
AA Best Supp Actor Win
Charlize Theron &
Paul Rudd
218.70
The Last Witch Hunter (2015) Vin Diesel 217.90
The Prestige (2006) Scarlett Johansson &
Hugh Jackman
208.40
Jaws: The Revenge (1987) Lorraine Gary 165.90
Children of Men (2006) Clive Owen &
Julianne Moore
132.90
Sherlock Gnomes (2018)
Voice Only
Johnny Depp &
James McAvoy
118.50
Going In Style (2017) Morgan Freeman &
Alan Arkin
118.30
Secondhand Lions (2003) Robert Duvall &
Haley Joel Osment
99.30
The Quiet American (2002)
AA Best Actor Nom
Brendan Fraser 59.60
Get Carter (2000) Sylvester Stallone 45.00
Quills (2000) Kate Winslet &
Joaquin Phoenix
41.70
The Weather Man (2005) Nicolas Cage 37.20
Youth (2015) Jane Fonda 35.60
Deadfall (1968) Giovanna Ralli 23.10
Last Orders (2001) Helen Mirren &
Bob Hoskins
15.20
Flawless (2007) Demi Moore 12.40
King of Thieves (2018) Michael Gambon 11.00
Sleuth (2007) Jude Law 8.90
The Great Escaper (2023)
Limited Release
Glenda Jackson 6.60
Stonehearst Asylum (2014) Ben Kingsley &
Kate Beckinsale
4.90
Medieval (2022) Ben Foster 4.90
Water (1985) Valerie Perrine 4.40
Last Love (2013) Jane Alexander 3.00
The Statement (2003) Tilda Swinton 2.20
Four Kids And It (2020)
Voice Only
Matthew Goode 1.00
Come Away (2020) Angelina Jolie 0.80
Twist (2021) Rafferty Law 0.60
Best Sellers (2021)
Limited Release
Aubrey Plaza 0.40
Shiner (2000) Martin Landau 0.30
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  1. ANONYMOUS says:
    September 29, 2023 at 5:32 am

    INTERVIEW SEPT 2023
    Michael Caine wears two watches: an analogue for the time and an Apple for everything else. It even knows his pulse, he says, impressed. Right now, it’s telling him his flat is 26C: warm enough for his wife, Shakira, to pour iced coffee into his flask, but not hot enough for those balcony doors to be open: “It’s blowing a bloody gale in here!”
    I slide them shut slightly. Is that OK? A bit more. Enough? Bit more. I close them completely. He’s happy now.
    Caine lives in Chelsea Harbour: posh 80s condos and Princess Diana’s gym. He likes the security and tolerates the helicopters. His London penthouse has caramel carpets, 360-degree views, two Oscars and 5,000 photos of his grandchildren.
    Below us lies Battersea Bridge, tide low, shore glittering. No, he shudders, he’s never mudlarked. Why not? After all, his first novel, out in November, is about binmen who find uranium down at the dump. “Well,” he says darkly, “other people do things and it goes all right. I do them and bad things happen.”
    He looks at me. We’re waiting for his co-star, John Standing, who is stuck in traffic. Caine is a big man with whom to make small talk. It’s not just that your brain short-circuits each time he speaks (Michael Caine?!?!), it’s that at 90, he’s still 6ft 2in, undiminished and, quite simply, intimidating.
    In 1987, he gave an acting masterclass in which he revealed the secret to being forceful on screen was a) don’t blink and b) mascara. It works face-to-face, too. The first one, anyway.
    During the Blitz, says Caine, he watched the city get flattened from his dormer in Camberwell; from here, he’s seen it rise up again. He loves new-build and soft furnishings with the passion of a man raised in an attic with no hot water, one outdoor loo and rickets. Every time a bomb fell, the mattresses doiiinged. “Me and my brother would laugh all through the bleedin’ air raids!”
    An update: Standing will be here shortly. I praise the pot-plants and Caine mourns his garden. He was evacuated to Berkshire, where he was fed a tin of pilchards a day and locked in a cupboard for the weekends, and then to rural Norfolk, where he discovered a love of horticulture – later energetically indulged at his own places in Oxfordshire and Surrey.
    Less so in Hollywood. He sold up there after someone told him that if he wanted to grow daffodils he’d need to put the bulbs in the fridge for a fortnight. “That was it! Final straw!” But did he do it? “Oh yeah. It worked.”
    In comes Standing, 89 but nimble as a debutante, all polish and apologies. They settle down, discuss the weather and a window is discreetly opened. Caine goggles at my iPad, which he mistakes for a phone: “Blimey, that’s a big one!”
    The Great Escaper is brilliant, I say. Caine is surprised I’ve seen it, let alone enjoyed it. Didn’t he? “Yeah. But I’ve had films where I liked it but other people didn’t agree with me.”
    No wonder it tempted them from retirement: meaty roles dry up as you approach 100. Caine plays Bernard Jordan, a real-life Royal Navy veteran who made headlines in 2014 when he travelled alone from his care home in Hove, East Sussex, to Normandy for the 70th D-day anniversary. The film – flintier than you might think, and very moving – fictionalises a friendship with Arthur, a former RAF pilot (Standing) he meets on the ferry.
    Both actors did national service in Berlin after the war; Caine was then drafted to Korea – “a bugger”, he says (his memoir suggests this is understatement). “When we got there they said: the Chinese have just sent a million troops. What? But they were just young kids and old men to take all our ammunition. You shoot at them and then the real fighters come. And that was the Chinese in a nutshell.”
    In the film, the pair make a pilgrimage to the war cemetery at Bayeux in Normandy. “What a waste,” cries Bernard as the camera zooms out to show the rows and rows of headstones. Caine doesn’t agree. “You had to have full cemeteries because you’d had to fight the German army, which was not a load of idiots. And the Germans had to be stopped.”
    And Korea? Well, communism is “perfectly frightful”, says Standing. Caine nods. “It doesn’t take care of the working class quite the way they say. My father was a fishmonger in Billingsgate, so I knew when I saw the communists, they had no idea what it was all about. Do any working-class people want to live in North Korea?”
    They both think national service should be reintroduced. “It gives you a whole new realisation of life,” says Caine. “I notice how different young people are today. They’re so free with everything. Military training makes you think about helping other people. My grandsons – all they do is play football.” (Still, he adds later, they’re also “incredible, unbelievable, and they worry about other people – which is handy”.)
    Standing chips in: one of his daughters is “a bit woke” and cautions him about getting cancelled. “It’s horrible! We’re not allowed to say anything. I loathe it. My God, you’re not allowed to have mother-in-law jokes! It’s sort of barking.”
    Then again, “things were far less complicated” 70 years ago. He smiles benignly. “Your telephone alone is the most complex thing anybody’s ever dreamed of. You’ve got all the information you ever want. You can chat to Henry VIII. Have you seen the man made of wood and iron playing the most immaculate game of ping-pong and thrashing the ordinary Briton at the other end?”
    I haven’t. Caine confesses some concern over robots – that’s partly what his novel, a thriller, is about. “But I’m 90. I don’t worry about the future. I worry if I’m gonna make it to lunch.”
    ________________________________________
    Caine and Standing first met on another hot day, in the summer of 1976, shooting another war movie, The Eagle Has Landed. Caine played a Nazi eager to assassinate Churchill; Standing a rather flaky vicar. Memories of the shoot seem thin on the ground, but they agree moviemaking hasn’t changed much.
    “I make my own world,” says Caine. “And if they employ me, they gotta leave me to do it my way. Otherwise I screw it up. And even if I do it my way, I screw it up as well.”
    They both chuckle. “Michael, darling!” says Standing.
    Have they changed?
    Standing sighs. “We’re just so bloody old.”
    “And we’re still here,” says Caine.
    “Which is incredible! All my mates are brown bread.”
    “Oh, mine and all. Sean Connery, Roger Moore. Everybody’s dead. It’s amazing.”
    How does that feel?
    “Lonely,” says Caine. “I had dinner last night here with eight women. Shakira gets ’em. I don’t get ’em. They’re the wives of my friends. I’m often sitting with a table full of widows.”
    Standing empathises. “Hundreds of women round one all the time. And you sit there thinking: give us a break! Ask me something, anything you like!”
    Caine nods. “Ask me a question about football! But I’m perfectly happy with all the girls. I love them.”
    Again: consult his memoir for more details, but this is putting it mildly. Caine spent the 50s, 60s and early 70s hoovering up hotties across the continents, pausing only for relationships with Natalie Wood and Nancy Sinatra and to refuel on vodka with Terence Stamp and Peter O’Toole.
    So when he says he was tired of bachelor life by 1972, you can believe it – he must have been exhausted. He had a night in, saw a Maxwell House ad on telly and resolved to fly to Brazil the next morning to marry the woman with the maracas. No need, said a pal: she was Indian, not Brazilian, and lived on the Fulham Road in west London.
    This is one of Caine’s regular chatshow yarns and he duly does it for us today: “I tracked her down! Incredible!” Caine is a bit of an anecdote jukebox – tales triggered by the briefest mention of Cary or Larry or Frank – but with material like his, it’s hard to object. Though charming, he also dominates conversation in general – about which Standing is a gent. Does he miss the 60s? “I don’t miss it, but I love having done it. I used to get into trouble all over the place.”
    He and Shakira have been married more than 50 years. Ageing is less awful, he advises, “if you’re married to someone really beautiful who doesn’t grow old. I wake up every morning and there she is!” It’s true: Shakira, 76, does seem preternaturally patient and gorgeous. “What is great about her is that she’s very bright. She was the secretary in the … I forget which country she comes from [Shakira was born in British Guiana, now Guyana], but she was the secretary of the American embassy, so she’s a great secretary for me. She runs everything. It’s unbelievable.”
    At the heart of The Great Escaper is another enduring marriage, between Bernie and Irene, played by Glenda Jackson in her final film. She and Caine first worked together 48 years ago. “She was very young and pretty,” he says. “Very attractive. Bloody good actress. But a left-wing socialist and I’m all for making money because I come from a very poor background.” They never talked politics – bit busy making the movies. He saw her five days before she died in June: “She seemed fine.” He’s relieved it was quick.
    Bernie and Irene are a devoted couple who, though the film doesn’t discuss it, didn’t have children. Might that have changed their dynamic? “Oh, tremendously,” says Caine. “You don’t have any other separate thing to talk about. You talk about each other. And you don’t have to judge how people feel about someone else. Only you.”
    It’s a sharp insight, particularly given that he’s personally “always had children around me like wildfire”. His eldest daughter, Dominique, was born when he was 23, during a brief marriage to the actor Patricia Haines; he and Shakira have another daughter, Natasha. Picking up his eldest grandson from the school is, Shakira tells me later, the highlight of his week. “I love kids,” he says, a bit wistfully.
    Standing murmurs agreement. He’s also been married for yonks. The secret, he says, is “laughing with each other”.
    Caine is less on-message: “Don’t argue. Don’t try to prove it with arguments or a row. Let ’em do it.”
    “Women are No 1 anyway,” says Standing.
    “It’s the only place you can get babies,” nods Caine.
    “But I gotta say this, Michael: have you seen what women do now?” says Standing. A dramatic pause. He’s a West End veteran, light comedies a specialty. “Cage fighting!” He turns to me. “What possessed your sex to do something like that? For men to cage fight is unthinkable. For women – boom, boom, boom, on each other’s faces! Deranged! But that’s modern life.”
    Has Caine seen that? “Oh yeah,” he says blithely. “On television.” And? “I was stunned.” Why? “I wouldn’t do that to anyone. Even if I didn’t like them. I’d just knock ’em out and walk away.”
    ________________________________________
    The real theme of The Great Escaper is – perhaps not one for the poster – that the only escape from old age is death. Yet Caine and Standing continue to produce work that will live on after they’re gone. Caine wrote his first novel bedridden during lockdown, and is now writing a second. Standing is a professional painter. They have six children between them. Are any of these enterprises better or worse as stabs at immortality? There’s only really one, says Caine: “Kindness.” And maybe Alfie. And The Muppet Christmas Carol.
    “Michael, darling,” says Standing, “I said to someone the other day: ‘Have you heard of Peter O’Toole?’ She said: ‘Well, I know the name.’ Once you are dead, you are dead. You think of Bogart! But young people only know Goose. What’s he called? Gosling. Big names in the theatre – Gielgud – mean nothing.”
    That craft and that class is history, they reckon. When I ask Caine who today’s version of him is, he agrees there isn’t one.
    “Because you don’t get young people now who are that far back in society. That had to come forward in great leaps. I think my type of person is extinct. I can’t think of anybody who had a life like mine.”
    It wasn’t just the poverty, he says, it was Korea and then, six months later, malaria (he nearly died). “And so it never stopped, you know? Until it did.”
    And yet it sort of hasn’t. Caine remains an icon of a time and an energy that feel increasingly exotic. He still calls himself working class and frets over any potential betrayal of his roots. The fate of his brother, Stanley, troubles him. “He just stood there and watched me become a millionaire when he didn’t even have a job. I turned him into someone who couldn’t move. I should have gone and moved him.”
    Once, Caine was shopping for a sofa and Stanley – who’d been awol for a while – appeared as part of the team lugging it in from the back. “I grabbed him. I said, ‘You are outta here.’ Oh, it was terrible. I didn’t know where he was.
    “He became an alcoholic. So I bought him two houses: one to live in and one to rent so he could have some money to buy some booze.” Caine’s eyes are rheumy. “He’s three years younger than me. And he’s been dead for five years.”
    There was an older brother, too, David, born with severe epilepsy and confined to an institution. Caine only found out about him after their mother’s death – though she had visited David secretly each week. Caine then made him as comfortable as possible. His mother spent her final years living in one of the houses he’d bought her with a carer and her two young sons, “who loved my mum like a grandma. I was very happy with that. I did everything for everybody. So that’s it. I’m sitting here, I’ve done it. I can’t do any more.”
    ________________________________________
    The Great Escaper has been widely described as Caine’s final film, just as Harry Brown was in 2009, and then – 24 films later – Best Sellers in 2021. It’s not. He’s shooting another in January: “It’s about someone who is so famous I’d never heard of him. Charles, Charles …”
    “ … Darwin,” says Standing.
    “Yeah. I play Charles Darwin. And that’ll be it. I won’t do another one after.”
    He’s sure?
    “No! But the point is, can you do it? Can you remember all the lines? I’ve got used to not working and staying in bed till 11am and staying out late at night. I love it.”
    In The Great Escaper, Jackson has a line about life being fun when you’re young, but once you hit her age, “you’re basically buggered”. Present company queers that pitch. “Oh blimey,” says Caine. “I have a great time.” Standing nods. His one concession to old age has been to give up tap-dancing – though you suspect he might oblige in an emergency.
    Neither man can think of a single instance in which they’ve been ill-treated because of their age.
    “Nobody patronises me,” says Caine.
    “We don’t look like we need help,” says Standing.
    In Caine’s case, that’s not entirely true. His skin is smooth, his cheeks full – “I’m very lucky the whole face has not collapsed” – and The Great Escaper showcases them with loads of fantastic closeups. Yet he does use a walker and wheelchair. Never had qualms about being seen with them, he says. “Nope. It’s my life and I do what I want.”
    “I think you are bloody brave,” says Standing. “Michael, man-to-man, it was an admirable thing to say: ‘Bollocks, I will do the film’, in spite of all those things.’”
    I think he’s right. For someone with an image as familiar – and cultivated – as Caine’s, to visibly concede frailty feels courageous. It’s a shame, I say, that “mobility issues” were given as the reason the Queen didn’t attend various events near the end – as if being seen in a wheelchair was inconceivable.
    Caine opts not to criticise the Queen. Instead he cues up the story of the first time they met, at a dinner, when she asked him to tell her a joke. He couldn’t think of a clean one. “She pointed to the man on her other side and said: ‘I’m gonna talk to him now. In five minutes I’ll be back and I want a joke.’”
    I don’t know what I’d imagined Michael Caine’s Queen impression to sound like, but it’s definitely a lot more mobster. That was quite frightening, I tell him, once he’s finished the joke (long, about a chicken). Does he see any similarities between them?
    “I think everyone sees a similarity between themselves and the Queen.”
    Even Standing, an actual baronet, demurs at that one. But the fact Caine believes it adds weight to the idea they do share something – the ability, perhaps, to unsettle others through their presence alone. The Great Escaper taps that, too. Bernie prompts in people – Arthur included – profound reckonings, without really trying. Can Caine relate?
    “I don’t know,” he says. “A bit, probably, yes. But it could be quite unpleasant. I don’t do things that are unpleasant.”
    But you feel you have that power?
    “Yeah, oh yeah.”
    And what’s that like?
    He grins. “Great.”
    Our time is up. Caine checks his watch. “28C,” he says, “and that’s with the bloody windows open.”
    The Great Escaper is in UK cinemas on 6 October.

    Reply
  2. BOB to STEVE Brexit Trivia says:
    October 18, 2021 at 6:05 am

    [INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER UK 8:20am MON 18 OCT 2021]
    ‘Sir Maurice Micklewhite [legendary English actor Michael Caine] has clarified his current political views on Brexit and Boris Johnson in a brand-new interview.

    The 88-year-old actor, who has often voted Conservative in the past, was in favour of Brexit – and still maintains his position despite recent issues surrounding the UK’s supply chain and evidence via the Northern Ireland protocol issue the Brexit was NOT “done” despite what Boris Johnson said at the last British general election.

    “Oh, that’s teething trouble,” Sir Maurice told Britain’s Guardian newspaper.

    “It’s obviously not going to go well immediately. I mean, I don’t know what’s going to happen. I’ve got to wait for Boris to come back off holiday. I mean, to do that, to go on holiday right now, it’s unbelievable. Empty shelves. People queueing for petrol. And you think: ‘Wait a minute. He’s gone to Marbella?’”

    Reflecting on Johnson as Prime Minster, Sir Maurice added: “Oh, I supported him. I thought he was great. But now I’m very disappointed in him. He made a big mistake there, going to Marbella.”

    In the interview Sir Maurice talking also about his movie career seemed to hint at retirement “I’ve made 150 movies. I think that’s enough!”’

    Reply
    1. Steve Lensman says:
      October 18, 2021 at 8:45 am

      Hi Bob, I read the whole interview earlier today. Many actors were against Brexit so glad Michael Caine voted for it, makes me even more of a fan. 🙂

      He says he can barely walk now, he should retire or play roles behind a desk barking orders to the young hero. I think in the film Kingsman he was behind a desk for the entire film. 150 movies? That’s plenty. Gene Hackman and Jack Nicholson retired with fewer films under their belt.

      I saw the trailer for Clint Eastwoods latest film Cry Macho, he can walk okay but he looked his age, 90 at the time, and very frail. By comparison 90 year old William Shatner looks healthier and he was shot out into space recently. One reporter quipped he was not just the oldest man in space but the largest too. 😉

      Reply
      1. BOB to STEVE Reply says:
        October 18, 2021 at 12:27 pm

        HI STEVE:

        Thanks for replying.

        I take your point about getting Sir Maurice roles to fit his current physical condition. Consider the following about character actor Jay C Flippen who supported Jimmy Stewart in several of his top westerns: Wichester 73/The Far Country/Bend of the River/Night Passage/Firecreek and the ‘oil western’ Thunder Bay.

        “After a leg amputation in 1965, Flippen continued acting, usually using a wheelchair, such as in his comeback role in a 1966 episode of The Virginian, and his 1967 guest appearance in Ironside (season one, A Very Cool Hot Car) and Jay C appeared too as a wheelchair-bound senior partner of John Wayne in Hellfighters (1968). ”

        Chuck too had problems walking in hiis reclining years.

        Reply
  3. Dan says:
    October 10, 2021 at 9:40 am

    Michael Caine, is the # 3 most connected actor of the 1970’s, and the # 24 most connected of the 1980’s.

    Reply
  4. Lyle says:
    May 12, 2021 at 6:16 pm

    Thanks Bruce.
    I’ve always been curious about those two films Actual Rentals.

    Reply

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