The Italian Job - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Italian Job"
The Italian Job (1969)
Timing: 1:39 (99 min)
The Italian Job - TMDB rating
6.989/10
708
The Italian Job - Kinopoisk rating
7.186/10
2480
The Italian Job - IMDB rating
7.2/10
49340

Actors and characters

Photo Michael Caine #8561Photo Michael Caine #8562Photo Michael Caine #8563Photo Michael Caine #8564

Michael Caine

Michael Caine
Character Charlie Croker
Photo Noël Coward #66912

Noël Coward

Noël Coward
Character Mr. Bridger
Photo Benny Hill #97807Photo Benny Hill #97808

Benny Hill

Benny Hill
Character Professor Simon Peach
Photo Margaret Blye #97809Photo Margaret Blye #97810Photo Margaret Blye #97811Photo Margaret Blye #97812

Margaret Blye

Margaret Blye
Character Lorna
Photo Raf Vallone #97813Photo Raf Vallone #97814Photo Raf Vallone #97815Photo Raf Vallone #97816

Raf Vallone

Raf Vallone
Character Altabani
Photo Tony Beckley #97817Photo Tony Beckley #97818
Tony Beckley
Character Camp Freddie
Photo Rossano Brazzi #97819Photo Rossano Brazzi #97820

Rossano Brazzi

Rossano Brazzi
Character Beckerman
Photo Irene Handl #97821Photo Irene Handl #97822

Irene Handl

Irene Handl
Character Miss Peach

Fred Emney

Fred Emney
Character Birkinshaw
Photo John Clive #50832
John Clive
Character Garage Manager
Graham Payn
Character Keats
Stanley Caine
Character Coco
Barry Cox
Character Chris
Photo Robert Powell #97825Photo Robert Powell #97826Photo Robert Powell #97827Photo Robert Powell #97828

Robert Powell

Robert Powell
Character Yellow
Photo Harry Baird #97829

Harry Baird

Harry Baird
Character Big William
Photo George Innes #58968
George Innes
Character Bill Bailey
Photo John Forgeham #97830

John Forgeham

John Forgeham
Character Frank
Photo Derek Ware #84800

Derek Ware

Derek Ware
Character Rozzer
Frank Jarvis
Character Roger
David Salamone
Character Dominic
Richard Essome
Character Tony
Photo Mario Valgoi #97831
Mario Valgoi
Character Manzo
Photo Renato Romano #97832
Renato Romano
Character Cosca
Franco Novelli
Character Altabani's Driver
Photo Robert Rietti #90021Photo Robert Rietti #90022

Robert Rietti

Robert Rietti
Character Police Chief
Photo David Kelly #66791Photo David Kelly #66792

David Kelly

David Kelly
Character Vicar
Photo Arnold Diamond #97833
Arnold Diamond
Character Senior Computer Room Official
Simon Dee
Character Shirtmaker
Photo Alastair Hunter #97834
Alastair Hunter
Character Cinema Warder
Lana Gatto
Character Mrs. Cosca
Photo Louis Mansi #97835

Louis Mansi

Louis Mansi
Character Computer Room Official
Hazel Collinson
Character Blonde Scrubber at Party
Photo Henry McGee #97836
Henry McGee
Character Tailor
Photo Lelia Goldoni #97837Photo Lelia Goldoni #97838

Lelia Goldoni

Lelia Goldoni
Character Mrs. Beckerman (uncredited)
Photo Valerie Leon #83617Photo Valerie Leon #83618Photo Valerie Leon #83619

Valerie Leon

Valerie Leon
Character Receptionist, Royal Lancaster

What's left behind the scenes

  • A video game of the same name was released in 2002, based on the film.
  • The owners of 'Mini' cars, British Motor Corp., refused to loan vehicles for filming. The head of Fiat Motors offered to loan cars to the film crew and even suggested replacing the 'Mini' with a 'Fiat 500', but director Peter Collinson (1936-1980) refused, reasoning that since the film was very 'British in spirit', 'Mini' cars were specifically needed. Regardless, Fiat management still loaned cars for filming and gave permission to film on the territory of the assembly plant. When the Italian authorities hesitated and refused to close roads, the mafia intervened. Entire districts of Turin were closed for filming, so the traffic jams and congestion shown in the film are real, and the reactions of motorists were also genuine.
  • When Charlie Croker, played by Michael Caine, is released from prison, his girlfriend is waiting for him in a car, and Charlie briefly mentions that it's the Pakistani ambassador’s car. During the making of the film, the Pakistani ambassador's car was indeed used.
  • The scene with Michael Caine and John Clive (1938-2012) was improvised from beginning to end.
  • Michael Caine's biography states that Benny Hill (1924-1992), who participated in the filming, was a rather reserved person and did not spend his free time with other members of the film crew. Even when all the actors and crew members stayed in the same hotel, he generally stayed in his own room.
  • According to Michael Caine, the box office receipts in the USA were unsatisfactory due to a flawed advertising campaign. The posters in the USA featured a nearly nude girl with a map drawn on her back, kneeling before a mafia boss with a machine gun. During a promotional tour of the USA, Caine saw this poster somewhere, and it angered him so much that he gave up and immediately returned home to England.
  • The track on the roof of the building did exist on the roof of the Fiat factory, built in 1923. The dimensions of the track were 512 meters by 79 meters. In the five-story building, with an area of 4,878 square kilometers, 6,000 workers once toiled.
  • Noël Coward was feeling so unwell that the scene in which he triumphantly walks through the prison had to be filmed in parts, as he had difficulty standing for long periods.
  • The sewer scene was filmed near Coventry, where underground tunnels between Birmingham and Stoke Oldemoor were being constructed at the time. The camera was mounted on a “Mini Moke” which drove ahead of the “Cooper” cars, and was driven by one of the stunt coordinator Remy Julien's (1930-1921) assistants. Julien very much wanted one of the “Cooper” cars to perform a full 360-degree roll around its axis (tunnel floor – wall – ceiling – and back to the floor) at speed. Three attempts were made, but each time the car fell onto its roof due to poor grip. The car sustained so much damage that the stunt was abandoned after the third attempt. According to sound engineer John Oldred (1921-2020), Julien once managed to complete a full roll in the car during rehearsals, but the cameras were not running at that moment. This was the only stunt Julien failed to pull off throughout the entire film.
  • A jump from the roof of one building to the roof of another was filmed from the roof of the Fiat factory. Some members of the film crew refused to be present, stating that it would all end badly, and the factory workers repeatedly made the sign of the cross at the stuntman sitting behind the wheel of the car.
  • The road that was filmed at the end of the movie led to a restaurant. On the first day of filming, it was Saturday, the weather was wonderful, and the shoot went off without a hitch. However, the next day, a huge queue of cars lined up at the beginning of the road, as the restaurant traditionally experienced a surge in visitors on Sundays. Some drivers, unhappy with the delay on their way to the restaurant, managed to break through the police barricade, and filming had to be stopped. For the next two weeks, it rained non-stop, and the snow line on the mountain dropped by approximately 76 meters. By the time filming was finally completed, the film crew had to sweep snow off the road.
  • Noël Coward was paid £25,000 for 10 days of filming in Dublin, Ireland, where filming took place to avoid strict British taxation.
  • The initial script was set in London, and it was intended to be a television film, but it was decided that the project was too ambitious for television. Therefore, the script was acquired for use in cinema, and the location was changed to Turin, which at the time had the most sophisticated computer-controlled traffic management system in all of Europe (initially, the location was to be moved to Milan, but it soon became clear that obtaining permission to film from the city authorities was simply impossible).
  • During the filming of the bus hanging on the edge of the cliff, the downwash from the helicopter affected the bus, and it began to tilt. It was only prevented from falling because the entire film crew literally clung to the front bumper and stopped the bus from tipping over.
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