Around Caine, a winning eccentricity holds sway. It's everything involving Noel Coward's Mr. Bridger, which even treats one old lag going to the lavs to perform morning ablutions as a matter of grave national pomp and circumstance. (Coward always had far more fun with his national treasure status than that miserable sod Olivier ever did.) It's Benny Hill and Irene Handl, two of a crop of familiar TV faces (John Le Mesurier, Fred Emney, Robert Powell) who explain why the film enjoyed such easy small-screen rotation in later years, in the roles of a sex-case professor ("Are they big? I like 'em big") and his enabler sister. The American remake of 2003 - prompted by the glorious new dawn of the Fast & Furious franchise - took Martin's chicanery very seriously, which missed the point: The Italian Job wasn't finally so much about the cars as it was the characters behind the wheel and cramming into the back seats. These were our budget version of Danny Ocean's slick hipsters: lopsided, asthmatic, distractible, disreputable, kinky, a bit crap, midpoints between Ealing's wheeler-dealers and early Guy Ritchie's shameless chancers who collectively embody the thick streak of perversity in the English national character. Wouldn't true classic car lovers squirm masochistically while watching those scenes in which convertibles get bulldozed down Italian hillsides? While we're at it, the sunkissed international shoot makes one wonder why on earth anyone would want to spend any more time on our accursed, rain-lashed isle, though Collinson stages one mournfully pretty tableau on the occasion of Aunt Nellie's "funeral". (Croker's gang only get as far as they do by exporting exactly the kind of traffic jam that was waiting to ensnare them back home.) The film remains an entertaining nonsense, though it's weird it became a sacred text of the Brexit set when what it so clearly illustrates is what we might call patriotic overreach: an inability to think through big ideas, and the capacity of flash Harrys like Charlie Croker to lead their followers over a cliff edge. One reason Britain is where it is in 2024: its people still regard The Italian Job not as cautionary but aspirational.
The Italian Job returns to cinemas nationwide from Friday.
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