Michael Cane - Top 10 films
September 2009
Michael Caine – Top 10 Films
1. Hannah and Her Sisters (1986)
Michael Caine provides the main romantic entanglement of the
film when he embarks on an adulterous romance with his
wife’s sister, Lee. Elliot (Michael Caine) is unhappy with
his wife’s independence and jealous of her emotional
strength, enough for it to cause him to look elsewhere.
Within a 12 month period, beginning and ending on
Thanksgiving parties hosted by Elliot, (Caine) and his wife,
Hannah, the story unravels through 3 main arcs.
2. The Dark Night (2008)
The Joker plans to reap havoc in Gotham City and Batman must
fight for good. Alfred Pennyworth, (Caine) Batman’s trusted
Butler who comes across more as a fatherly figure to Batman
than any other character, supplies regular, useful advice,
earning him the title of ‘Batman’s Batman’.
3. Zulu (1964)
His first starring role, Lieutenant Gonville Bromhea (Caine),
has a different military background to his colleague, Chard.
Their differences prove to be a problem when they are to
prepare for an attack.
4. Batman Begins (2005)
Directed by Christopher Nolan who thought Michael Caine
would portray the foster father element of the character
effectively. Caine took the time to create his own back
story; his character Alfred Pennyworth, served in the
Special Air Service. He became the Waynes’ family Butler
after being wounded as Thomas Wayne, “wanted a butler, but
someone a bit tougher than that.” In Batman Begins it is
clear that he is more to than a Butler to Batman and proves
his ‘toughness’.
5. Children of Men (2006)
Jasper Palmer shows Caine’s diversity as an actor,
portraying for the first time, someone who will pass gas or
smoke cannabis ‘he believed he was this guy’. Theo, an
activist turned apathetic bureaucrat, learns that the
world's youngest human, an eighteen-year-old, has been
stabbed to death. Theo is kid-napped by an underground
resistance group, on escaping to Jasper’s house he presents
a plan to smuggle him into a detention camp for refugees.
6. The Cider House Rules (1999)
An orphanage managed by Dr. Wilbur Larch (Michael Caine)
plays home to Homer Wells, an orphan who was forced to grow
up in Larch’s orphanage after being returned twice by foster
parents. Dr. Larch secretly trains Homer in the ‘science of
women’ and abortions as an apprentice, even though Homer has
never attended school. Michal Caine owes this film as reason
to winning an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting
Role.
7. Educating Rita (1983)
Michael Caine wins a BAFTA for best actor in this ‘comedy
about a teacher and a very memorable student.’ Dr Frank
Bryant (Caine), a middle-aged, alcoholic career academic
takes on the task of tutoring to pay for his drinking habits
and Rita, dissatisfied with the routine of her social life
have a deep effect on one another. It is said that both
Walters and Caine are great, and their banter, their
debates, and even their screaming matches are delights.
Director Lewis Gilbert has taken a two-person play from
stage to screen and cracked it open,
8. The Italian Job (1969)
On Charlie Croker’s (Caine’s) release from prison he is
given plans for a daring robbery. Croker decides to follow
the plans and forget about the risks, but in order to pull
it off he must put together a larger gang. Caine plays a
cocky, cool small time London crook who takes on a bigger
mission than he’s ever attempted: to nick $4 million dollar
shipment of gold from under the noses of the Mafia, and
escaping in three Mini Coopers and a coach.
9. Is Anybody There (2009)
Set in a sleepy British seaside town in the 1980s, IS
ANYBODY THERE? tells the story of a morbid, bookish
10-year-old boy whose parents have turned their house into a
retirement home. While his mother (Duff) struggles to keep
the business afloat and his father (Morrissey) copes with
the onset of a mid-life crisis, Edward (Milner) becomes
increasingly obsessed with the afterlives of the home’s
elderly residents, following them around with a
tape-recorder to capture the sound of the soul as it escapes
the mortal coil… But Edward’s macabre turn of mind is
distracted by the arrival of “The Amazing” Clarence (Michael
Caine), an anarchic retired magician and grieving widower
who is determined to age disgracefully. As an unlikely
friendship blossoms between them, the old man comes to terms
with his past, the child masters his fear of the future, and
both learn to seize the day
10. Last Orders (2001)
The final wishes of a dying man, Jack Dodds, played by
Michael Cain, an East London butcher who influenced four men
over the course of his imperfect, yet honest lifetime.
Through frequent flash backs, that are spread across six
decades, the stories of the events that brought these four
together are slowly revealed, each highlighting the
importance of friendship and love.
Is Anybody There? is out now on DVD and Blu-Ray
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