HOW TO STEAL A MILLION: Blu-ray (2oth Century-Fox 1966) Twilight Time
Generally
speaking, it is never a good idea to begin any movie review with gushing
praise. After all, where is the incentive for reading beyond the byline? But I
cannot help it. I absolutely adore the movies of William Wyler; an extension of
my admiration for the man himself. The word ‘artist’
gets bandied about so often these days it has all but lost its potency as a
signifier of ‘genius’. But Wyler was
quite simply that; intuitive and methodical, exacting, yet precise, earning him
the nickname ‘40-take Wyler.’ Yet,
for all his magnitude as an artiste, Wyler’s methods for achieving such diverse
cinematic greatness often left his actors nonplussed; Wyler, intensely focused
behind the camera, listening with pricked ears, only to mutter “again” or “it stinks!” as the voice of…ahem…‘encouragement’. Even so, actors never resented him. “The only answer I have,” Charlton
Heston once speculated, “…is that his
taste is impeccable and every actor knows it. Your faith in his taste and what
it will do for your performance is what makes casting a Wyler picture a
cinch...doing a film for Wyler is like getting the works in a Turkish bath. You
darn near drown, but you come out smelling like a rose.” Chuck likely knew
of whence he spoke, having taken home the little gold bald guy for his titanic
performance in Wyler’s multi-Oscar-winning Ben-Hur
(1959).
Now, personally,
I put very little weight in the annual Oscar horse race. Too many great talents
have never been honored. Nevertheless, over the course of his illustrious
career, Wyler was bestowed the accolade of twelve nominations for direction,
thirteen for Best Picture. Fourteen actors have won Academy Awards under his
direction; a record perhaps only rivaled by Wyler’s ambition to always reinvent
and challenge himself, making at least one movie in virtually every genre
except ‘horror’, while keeping the
core values of his film-making technique close at hand. As Wyler, who by 1966,
the year he made the erudite romantic caper/comedy, How To Steal a Million was entering the emeritus years of a long
and industrious career, could look back upon his Hollywood tenure with
rose-colored glasses; a potpourri as richly varied as it was soon to reap universal
praise from both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, as well as
the American Film Institute. Yet, there was little about Wyler’s arrival in Los
Angeles in 1923 to suggest he would become renowned for box office-bankable
literary adaptations and wartime melodramas of the highest order.
Indeed, hired
by Universal Studios, basically as a grunt, Wyler was fired for frequently
cutting out to play pool and organizing poker games on the company’s time. Yet,
Wyler’s 3 Oscar wins as Best Director of three as noteworthy Best Pictures (Mrs. Miniver, 1943, The Best Years of Our Lives, 1946, and
the aforementioned Ben-Hur, 1959)
still holds a record. Hence, by the time Wyler settled in to shoot How To Steal a Million, he had lived
and learned a lot about his technique and people; his volatile affair with
Bette Davis – the leading lady whom he coached and coaxed through three of her
most memorable outings (Jezebel,
1938; The Letter, 1940 and, The Little Foxes, 1941) leaving no
lasting scars or bitter remorse for his admiration of the star. “It was all Wyler,” Davis would later
offer, “I had known all the horrors of no
direction and bad direction. I now knew what a great director was,” she
reflected in 1971, “…and what he could
mean to an actress. I will always be grateful to him for his toughness and his
genius.” Almost miraculously, Wyler remained humble and circumspect about
his own contribution to making movies. “It’s
eighty percent script,” he once explained, “…and twenty percent great actors. There’s nothing else to it!”
How to Steal a Million stars another Wyler favorite; Audrey Hepburn,
who had already won her Oscar in another
Wyler masterpiece, Roman Holiday
(1950). And although Hepburn is as always, rather luminous in ‘Million’,
there is little here to suggest she is on her way to another Academy Award for
this performance. Even so, Audrey positively glows as Nicole Bonnet; a winsome
and fashion-savvy ingénue, immaculately tricked out in stunning sixties
mod-chic haute couture, exclusively designed for her by Hubert de Givenchy. In
retrospect, How To Steal a Million
is deceptively featherweight; a candied bon-bon of the romantic comedy with the
great Peter O’Toole (as Simon Dermott) trading his usual severity for being ‘a serious actor’, instead taking a
rather handsome and jaunty spree as the amiable romantic fop, increasingly in
love with the daughter of a fraudulent art dealer (played with jovial aplomb by
Hugh Griffith). Wyler’s pacing
throughout How To Steal a Million is
palliated to downright glacial, which isn’t a bad thing. In fact, owing to the
sublime chemistry between his two stars, who first ‘meet cute’ under the cover of night; she, in a sexy slip, after
being spooked from reading Hitchcock’s bio and he, in a tuxedo no less, about
to steal a paint sample for analysis from one of her father’s forged Van Goghs
hanging in the parlor; Wyler gets precisely the uber-elegance and poise he
wants and needs to concoct his class ‘A’ sexy screwball.
Based on a
story idea by George Bradshaw, Harry Kurnitz’s screenplay is an exercise in
urbanity; the wry witticisms laid end to end that, in Hepburn and O’Toole’s
competent care and diction, fairly ooze highborn sex appeal. Told by Hepburn’s
Nicole, after she has already inflicted a flesh wound with one of her father’s
vintage pistols, that he is not very brave, O’Toole’s Simon quips, “I’m a society burglar. I don’t expect
people to rush about shooting at me. Besides…I’m the one who’s bleeding.” Atypical
of the screwball, Nicole gives as good as she gets, the stichomythic badinage,
delicious, enthralling, and quite simply, fun for a listen. As when asked by
Simon to ‘take off her clothes’ in
readiness for their grand caper, she smirks, inquisitively, adding, “Are we planning the same sort of crime?”;
he, even more smarmily bats back with an in-joke, “You’re quite safe. It’s dress rehearsal time. That’s why we bought all
this lovely junk…for one thing…it gives Givenchy the night off.” Adding
that her scrub-lady’s attire makes her feel positively sixteenth century, Simon’s
smug inquiry, “Where were you precisely
in the sixteenth century?” and, with sassy charm, Nicole replies, “I don’t know, but that’s not how I was
dressed!”
I have read
quite a few reviews suggesting Wyler takes too long to ‘get to the point’ of his story; critics, I think, utterly missing the point of the story, devoted to
slick, sly and subversive banter, the crime – or rather, ‘crimes’ – incidental to
out-and-out unimportant to the plot; an implausibly good-natured, elegantly
tailored grand amour between a cordial cad and enterprising Parisian socialite,
far less innocent than she pretends.
Neither O’Toole nor Hepburn overplays their hand; the result,
spectacularly evasive repartee to whet both theirs and the audiences’ palette for
sensual love-making of the old school Hollywood ilk, where passions – oft unrequited
– occasionally are allowed only a smolder before the camera pans to the grate
of a raging fireplace. Wyler does, in fact, hail from this not altogether
distant epoch, but realizes he cannot hold tight to its vestiges of good taste
in the swingin’ sixties. In lieu of ‘go
for the crotch’ flashes of skin, Wyler instead has O’Toole and Hepburn play
up their intentions in a sort of saucy spank; each clobbering the other with
hot-to-trot one-upsmanship in eruditeness.
Immediately
following the picture’s main title sequence, showcasing Wyler’s love of framed
art, set to John Williams’ ebullient score – itself all playful and full of
bounce – we digress to a fashionable auction house in Paris where art
collector, Charles Bonnet is auctioning off his perfect knock-off of a Paul
Cézanne to unsuspecting wealthy patrons. The portrait fetches a cool half
million, its announcement on the radio causing Bonnet’s daughter, Nicole to hurry
home in her expensive candy-apple red Autobianchi Bianchina Special Cabriolet.
She chastises dad for his chutzpah. After all, forgery is a crime. The stakes
are much too high. Momentarily, the wisdom of Nicole’s logic appears to bear
itself out; a small police brigade descending on their villa. But no – the gendarmes
have not come for Charles; rather, to escort a loan-out of his beloved Cellini
Venus to the Kléber-Lafayette Museum in Paris where; the planned centerpiece of
an important new exhibition. One
problem: like all other ‘masterpieces’ in the family’s possession the Cellini
too is a fake, forged in 1908 by Nicole's grandfather, who used her grandmother
as his muse and model. Nevertheless, the Cellini would easily fail even the
most basic forensic test to establish the date of its materials and creation.
Charles has no fear – and, no shame, as it were. After all, no such tests are
forthcoming by the gallery’s curator, Monsieur Grammont (Fernand Gravey), who
treats the statuette with an absurd amount of caution and reverence.
Prior to the
exchange of the Cellini, Charles was laboring over a newly forged Van Gogh,
presently hanging in his living room. Now, as he attends the museum’s
triumphant premiere of his Cellini, a dark and shadowy figure is making its way
to his seemingly unprotected villa. Nicole, who has elected to remain cozied up
to a Hitchcock bio in lieu of attending the spectacle, hears a noise. Dislodging
one of her father’s vintage pistols from its wall mount, she tiptoes
downstairs, and, at the most opportune moment holds the would-be thief of the
Van Gogh at bay. The man, Simon Dermott, feigns innocence, claiming simply to
have been enamored with a glimpse of the painting he replaces back on the wall
as Nicole looks on. To avoid a police investigation of her father’s fake
masterpieces Nicole suggests she will let Simon off ‘this time’, but unexpectedly,
the gun in her hand goes off, wounding him in the arm. It is a superficial
graze. Nevertheless, after momentarily fainting at the sight of his blood,
Nicole dutifully cleans the wound in the kitchen with a bottle of peroxide;
then, under duress, agrees to drive Simon back to the Ritz in his equally as
sport, lemon yellow Jaguar E-Type; hardly an inconspicuous mode of
transportation for the common thief. Asked to explain it, Simon merely suggests
like everything else, the car is stolen. “I
can’t drive a stolen car!” Nicole exclaims, to which Simon casually
explains, “Same principle, four gears
forward, one reverse.”
In the
courtyard of the Ritz, Simon takes even more liberties, planting a fairly
passionate kiss on Nicole’s lips before ushering her into a taxi. As luck would
have it, Simon is hardly a thief – common or otherwise, but actually a private
investigator hired for insurance purposes by DeSolnay (Charles Boyer).
Meanwhile, Nicole informs Charles not only of the foiled crime, but also she
presently has a date with American tycoon, Davis Leland (Eli Wallach). Unaware
of Leland’s maniacal obsession to own the Venus statuette, Nicole nevertheless
becomes highly suspicious of her beaux. However, after Leland confides the real
reason for their dinner engagement, Nicole is not only relieved, but rather
casual about fluffing him off. The Cellini is not for sale. Of course, this
only amplifies more Leland’s desire to possess it. The next day, Kléber-Lafayette’s
insurance clerk (Eddie Malin) arrives at Charles’ villa to gain his signature
on a million-dollar policy for the sculpture. Only after Charles signs it does
he realize that as part of the process the Cellini will be subjected to a
highly technical examination to ensure its authenticity. Frantic to spare
Charles a lengthy query once the statuette is found out to be a fake, thus
placing the legitimacy of all his other masterpieces in question, Nicole hires
Simon to help her break into the museum and steal back the Venus. Unable, as
yet, to reveal his true identity to her, Simon reluctantly agrees to partake of
this venture.
On the eve of
their planned heist, Leland makes an impromptu visit to Charles’ villa, proposing
his hand in marriage, merely to gain access to the Cellini as a family
heirloom. Unable to dissuade him from his cause, Nicole hurriedly accepts
Leland’s engagement ring before excusing herself to rush off to the museum.
Meeting up with Simon, the pair hides in a nearby utility closet until the
museum closes. Afterward, Simon repeatedly sets off the alarm system, slicing
through the invisible beams that surround the statuette with a boomerang
acquired several days earlier. After several false alarms cause the museum to
go into complete lock-down mode, the guards become complacent about
investigating the area, instead suspecting a complete malfunction of the system
itself. Simon reveals to Nicole he knows the real reason why she wants the
Cellini stolen. Furthermore, he shares with her that his participation in the
heist is predicated on nothing more than his feelings for her. Moving
stealthily between the guards, Simon makes his way into the museum forecourt
and steals the Cellini, hiding it in a cleaner’s bucket. Dressed in her drab
attire as one of the nondescript cleaners, Nicole quietly skulks off with the
Cellini concealed and the two make their daring escape through the basement
just as guards discover the statuette has disappeared for real this time. The
next morning, Simon achieves his greatest coup; convincing Leland he has stolen
the Cellini on a spree, offering to give him the statuette if he will dissolve
his engagement to Nicole and immediately leave Paris. Naturally, Leland agrees
and the exchange is made.
After Leland’s
departure, Nicole joins Simon at his table to celebrate their robbery. Only
now, Simon has one more surprise in store. He finally reveals himself to be
college-educated art expert and investigator hired by the world's largest
galleries to strengthen security and uncover forgeries. However, he intends to
say absolutely nothing about any of the events that have recently transpired;
his pledge of ‘good faith’ predicated on Nicole’s acceptance of his proposal in
marriage. With the Venus safely out of the country, no investigation regarding
its legitimacy is possible. Relieved, Charles agrees to Simon’s terms; to
officially retire from forgeries. Alas,
as the newly wedded couple depart Charles’ villa for the last time, they spy
South American art collector, Senor Paravideo (Marcel Dalio) hurriedly coming
up the walk to admire Charles’ Van Gogh. Has Charles changed his ways? Hardly.
Does it matter? Not really. Love has triumphed as Nicole and Simon drive off to
begin their legitimate lives together as man and wife.
How To Steal a Million is an
expertly played farce, lent its intercontinental charm by veteran
cinematographer, Charles Lang; Paris, and its reasonable Fox facsimiles recreated
for virtually all of the interiors, sparkling with cosmopolitan sophistication; Alexandre Trauner’s Production Design a visual treat
for the eye. The picture may lack
William Wyler’s usual attention for delivering a more intimate affair (in point
of fact, it does), but Wyler’s focus herein is primarily – and wisely situated
on the pseudo-antagonistic chemistry between O’Toole’s stiff-britches
investigator cum thief, and, Hepburn’s magnificently coiffured young Miss of
this catered affair. As this détente never fails to enthrall, How to Steal a Million emerges with
some good solid acting, countless exchanges of debonair dialogue, and, with the
added plus of seeing the portly and playful Hugh Griffith, and, frenetically
charged Eli Wallach as the wily ole fraud and dementedly wealthy art lover
respectively. This is the sort of diamond
tiara-styled rom/com Hollywood has not made in decades, and furthermore, would
not even know where to begin concocting today. It serves the material well the
cast is culled from an alumni of the very best the industry then had to offer.
I sincerely have no idea who could be cast today if any such fool notion was to
be applied. Nevertheless, How To Steal a
Million continues to stand as a prime exemplar from this bygone era when
stars were stars and shone beyond the footlights with a thousand kilowatt stardust
in unabashed professionalism that, like the era from whence it came, now seems
as lost to us as the ghost flowers of yesteryears vintage in Teflon-coated
talent.
No regrets
with Twilight Time’s new to Blu release of How
to Steal a Million. It’s mostly dreamy with a few minor caveats to
consider. Fox has provided TT’s boutique label with another quality affair;
eye-popping colors, accurately represented grain, good color balance – mostly –
and spot on contrast. There is a brief moment during the scene where Nicole
treats Simon’s flesh wound in the kitchen, where the image briefly – and inexplicably
– falters; as though it were cobbled together from several dupes inserted: even
the camera’s perspective jump cuts – twice – to a closer, then closer still re-framing
of the exact same shot while the action taking place seamlessly continues.
There are also a few very brief scenes where colors lean toward a queer green
bias. Case in point, Nicole driving Simon back to the Ritz. Although this
sequence is shot at night, there are no genuine blacks, but tonal variations of
a muddy grey/brown with an ever so slight bilious wash applied to everything.
Again, it’s a brief interruption in an otherwise immaculate visual
presentation. A tad disappointing; the audio remains 2.0 DTS mono; John
Williams (billed as Johnny Williams in the credits) main title score sounding
strident and slightly distorted. Mercifully, TT gives us an isolated track of
the complete score in 5.1 DTS, showing off these orchestrations to their very
best advantage and ‘wow’ do they sound good. The other extra of noteworthy
merit: Biography’s Special on Audrey Hepburn. It’s presented in SD and, at
times, suffers from the limited source materials and edge effects inherent in
old TV broadcasts. But it is still worth the viewing. Finally, we get an audio
commentary from Eli Wallach and Wyler’s daughter, Catherine. This was recorded
for the 2003 DVD release of How To Steal
a Million and I have to say it is disappointingly sparse. Bottom line: How To Steal a Million is vintage
Wyler, Hepburn and O’Toole. The Blu-ray takes a quantum leap forward from the
tired old Fox Studio Classics DVD. This is a ‘must have’ purchase. And, with
only 3000 copies available, I would not waste any time ordering yours today!
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
4.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
4.5
EXTRAS
3
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