I
first saw Michael Caine in Zulu, but
he didn’t stick, not like Nigel Green’s stern Color-Sergeant, or James Booth’s
cheeky slacker, Pvt. Hook. Caine had in
fact auditioned to play Hook, but the director Cy Enfield cast him as the
junior lieutenant, Bromhead. Caine later
said it was lucky
Then in
1965, The Ipcress File was released. Alfie,
a year later, made him a name, and Shirley MacLaine hired him for Gambit.
Those three pictures essentially established him as a star, and
established the character he so often played, insolent, a little below the
salt, a striver with an ironic sensibility, and somehow detached from his own
self-regard. Ipcress, though, was the movie that put him front and center, at
least for me personally, and he played Harry again in Funeral in Berlin and Billion-Dollar
Brain. Not quite a franchise like
the Bond pictures, they seemed a good deal less calculated.
Bob
Hoskins remarked that Caine basically opened the door for working-class
stiffs. Before him, you had to mimic the
posh. Roger Moore, who hailed from
Lambeth, not far from Southwark, where Caine grew up, had to get rid of his
speech patterns, which in
The
trick of Michael Caine is his natural authenticity, his transparency. He’s not pretending to be anything but what
he is, although acting is play. Caine,
like Bob Hoskins, is recognizably not
Oxbridge, the Royal Shakespeare, or the soothing tones of the BBC. His voice identifies him.
He’s
got over sixty years in the business, but earlier on, in 1971, he made the
movie that for me personifies him. You
can’t imagine anybody but Michael Caine playing Jack in Get Carter.
The
movie is more nihilist than the Ted Lewis novel it’s based on, which is going
some, because Ted Lewis could be as hardboiled as they come, but Get Carter is a particular kind of Brit noir.
You could cast back to Brighton
Rock or Odd Man Out, or the truly
odd Never Let Go – Peter Sellers as a
psychotic gang boss – or look ahead to The
Long Good Friday. Richard Burton did
Villain, a remake of White Heat, the same year Get Carter came out. More recently, Essex Boys (2000), with Sean Bean, or Tom Hardy’s astonishing
double turn as the Kray twins in Legend
(2015).
Get Carter has a
deceptively simple premise. A legbreaker
for the
Get Carter was
the director Mike Hodges’ first feature, and he wrote the screenplay. The cinematographer was Wolfgang Suschitzky,
who says he waited for the light, and set the exposure. The rest is Hodges. This is generous of him to say, because the
look of Get Carter is very
specific. It begins with a slow zoom in,
to the lit upper floor of a dark
This
is a clear esthetic choice. The shooting
method reflects the movie’s objective content.
Pornography is the story hook, and a visual correlative.
We will, in charity, pass over the painful remakes. The original is the one to see, and in a very real sense, it’s sui generis. You can’t do better. This is Michael Caine epitomized; this is visceral, committed movie-making, as if the fate of the human condition depended on it.