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How to Steal a Million

How to Steal a Million

List Price: $14.98
Your Price: $11.24
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "..OH, PA-PAHHH...SELLING A FAKE MASTERPIECE IS A 'CRIME'! "
Review: This delightful comedy has all the delicate sparkle of a newly-opened bottle of French Champagne. Forget "My Fair Lady," forget "Breakfast At Tiffany's,"...1966's "HOW TO STEAL A MILLION" is Audrey Hepburn's best film from the 1960's. One of the last great romantic comedies of style to be filmed before the anti- establishment films of the late '60's prevailed, "How To Steal A Million" combines the elements of visual elegance (opulence even, look at the purple velvet bannisters and carpet on the golden staircase in Audrey Hepburn's Paris chateau) with sophisticated dry wit; a beautiful, romantic score with a "kooky" twist on the "French farce." Beautiful scenery, sublime chaos, near-Hitchcockian-intrigue, zippy car chases in quirky autos, and Audrey Hepburn's wacky fashions make for one of the best combinations the screen has seen so far. Ironically, the best twist in this story is that the "MILLION" Audrey Hepburn's and Peter O'Toole's characters are trying to "STEAL" is not what they 'actually' ARE stealing (on purpose). To figure that one out...watch AND ENJOY this MAGNIFICENT movie! "Oh, Pa-Pahhhh! ..."

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: So THAT's what all the fuss over Peter O'Toole's about!
Review: This movie I give a solid four stars, but Peter O'Toole gets five because it's the most I could give. (Hey amazon, how about a little room for upward adjustment under extenuating circumstances like these?)

I'm an Audrey fan and she's her usual delightful self in this movie, no longer the ingenue but every bit as lithe and fetching as ever. She was a dazzler, but in Peter O'Toole she met her match. He is something else -- the Jude Law of his day, I suppose! (The highest of high compliments I give). In "How To Steal A Million" O'Toole is suave and self-assured but never arrogant ... spectacularly good looking (hey, it's not his fault) ... witty but flawed, not what he seems and in the end, you're glad of it. He can burgle my objects d'art any day!

The movie also has that very "1960's" look and feel to it that allow you to time travel, but not so far back you feel as though you've been whiplashed when it ends. The '60's were in many ways more modern than the '70's, and played against the backdrop of Paris those burgeoning modern sensibilities find an excellent foil. Audrey is her usual "au courant" self, except for one scene in which she has to play a cleaning lady. Like Liza Doolittle, she would shine through a burlap sack.

O'Toole and Hepburn are very, very winning here. The assorted cast of characters are daffy but mostly harmless, and if I'm not completely mistaken, the movie does poke gentle fun at the French. (Not that terribly difficult to do, but then again we re-elected ... oh, never mind).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Breath of fresh air with Audrey Hepburn at her most chic
Review: Was there ever another actress to compare with Audrey Hepburn? She combined all the ideal qualities of what a skilled, beautiful, and totally charming actress should be in the one gorgeous package. Indeed in William Wyler's sophisticated heist film "How to Steal a Million",she has never been more gorgeous and appealing while displaying that totally unique and special talent that was solely her own and has never been duplicated by another actress.

Released in 1966 at the height of the "mod" period, "How to Steal a Million", in alot of ways is very much of it's time and this probably explains why this film is perhaps not as well known as other films of both Audrey Hepburn and Peter O'Toole. This is unfortunate as the pair make a superb romantic comedy team and combine excellently in this slick and very chic story set in the most beautiful of cities, fashionable Paris. "How to Steal a Million", tells the story of Nicole Bonnet (Hepburn) who is the glamourous and very mod daughter of art collector Charles Bonnet (Hugh Griffith is a delightfully eccentric performance) who is what could be described as a lovable rascal and spends his time forging great art which he then sells to unsuspecting but wealthy art enthusiasts. Complications however arise when one of Monsieur Bonnet's "masterpieces", a statue of Venus supposedly carved by famed Italian artisan Cellini in the sixteenth century, but in reality a modern work by Nicole's grandfather, is put on display in a Paris Museum. The problem however here is that for insurance purposes the work must be inspected by a world famous expert on authentic works of art and their dating which would threaten to expose Ms. Bonnet for the fraud that he is,lovable or otherwise! Nicole concocts a wild scheme with the collaboration of supposed society thief Davis Leland (Peter O'Toole in a marvellously sophisticated performance),to steal the statue from the museum before her father is exposed as a fraud. Along the way the pair, in between scampering around museum interiors and hiding out in broom closets find themselves falling in love. What unravels is a totally delightful caper comedy with marvellous screen chemistry between Audrey Hepburn and Peter O'Toole in their only appearance together. Audrey is beyond comparison as the chic Givenchy lady about town who gets involved in the museum robbery. Her outfits are a total dream, and her mod hairstyles and sunglasses are just right for this charming 1960's story with its rich Parisian settings. Peter O'Toole displays a great talent for sophisticated comedy and as is often the case in such stories turns out to be not exactly what he first seems to be when we first encounter him trying to "steal" one of Charles Bonnet "Van Gogh's".

The cast of "How to Steal a Million", is rounded out in a very funny performance by Eli Wallach as a fanatical art collector who has his sights set on the "Cellini" Venus and wants it no matter what lengths he has to go to, even proposing marriage to a very reluctant Nicole! Veteran heart throb Charles Boyer provides the necessary authentic French atmosphere in a small role as Charles De Solnay , O'Toole's boss who has his own interest in the Bonnet family. The film is a rich snapshot of all things beautiful and sophisticated in 1966 Paris from the wonderful on location photgraphy, Audrey's stunning fashions, all the beautiful art on display and museum interiors. The film has been accused of being "too perfect" in some respects but the story never pretends to take itself seriously and its look is what stays in the mind. Indeed I have a hard time imagining such a fashionable couple as Hepburn and O'Toole in any other setting! Directed at a nice pace by veteran William Wyler who guided Audrey Hepburn through the classic "Roman Holiday", and the sadly underappreciated "The Children's Hour", Wyler manages to combine romance with high slap stick as seen in the very amusing scenes when the alarm protecting the Venus is set off prompting an almost "Keystone Cops" routine by the French Police arriving time after time for what are false alarms at the museum.

With the absense of elegant comedy with beautifully dressed people in elegant settings nowadays movies like this one are like a glass of water in the desert. I love most sophisticated comedies and while not the best ever made, if you love Paris and Audrey Hepburn like I do you can't help but be enchanted by William Wyler's "How to Steal a Million". Open the champagne and sit back and enjoy!


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