VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
11.307
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un truffatore si confonde con un gruppo di ladri che intendono rapinare un pugnale ingioiellato in un museo di Istanbul.Un truffatore si confonde con un gruppo di ladri che intendono rapinare un pugnale ingioiellato in un museo di Istanbul.Un truffatore si confonde con un gruppo di ladri che intendono rapinare un pugnale ingioiellato in un museo di Istanbul.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Vincitore di 1 Oscar
- 4 vittorie e 4 candidature totali
Titos Vandis
- Harback
- (as Titos Wandis)
Joe Dassin
- Josef
- (as Joseph Dassin)
Faik Coskun
- Tavla Player at Hilton
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jules Dassin
- Turkish Cop
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Selahattin Içsel
- Tavla Player at Hilton
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Bedri Çavusoglu
- Police Officer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Every single moment of Topkapi that dealt with the heist was an absolute thrill to me. It has been a long time since I watched a movie that had me holding my breath to this degree, but there were so many moments when I couldn't wait to see what would happen next (including a scene that clearly inspired an iconic moment from the first Mission: Impossible film.) I also loved how this movie embraced the idea of building a team of people who all have specific roles to play in the heist. Between watching the team assembling and seeing how they adapt to problems along the way, I was hooked. I only wish they got to the actual job a little earlier in the film. There was a long stretch of time where they do nothing of importance, and I was worried it might get boring. I also didn't fully understand the reason that they involved Peter Ustinov in their plot in the first place, which seemed to be a massive inconvenience created solely to add drama to the film.
That being said, I would never complain about Ustinov's presence in any movie. He's a great actor, and works well in this bumbling role. I also quite enjoyed Maximilian Schell as the mastermind and Robert Morley as the gadget man. Where Topkapi truly fell flat for me was Melina Mercouri. She had basically no purpose in the film, and did nothing more than serve as a distraction during the heist. Her entire performance rubbed me the wrong way, and I practically began the film rooting against the team simply because they were stealing something that was ostensibly for her. There were plenty of good things in Topkapi to win me back, and she isn't on screen during the best parts of the movie, so I still enjoyed my time with it. There are certainly better heist/caper films that I've seen, but Topkapi has all the right qualities to be on that list. I will probably even give it another try in the future, and perhaps my complaints won't bother me so much then.
That being said, I would never complain about Ustinov's presence in any movie. He's a great actor, and works well in this bumbling role. I also quite enjoyed Maximilian Schell as the mastermind and Robert Morley as the gadget man. Where Topkapi truly fell flat for me was Melina Mercouri. She had basically no purpose in the film, and did nothing more than serve as a distraction during the heist. Her entire performance rubbed me the wrong way, and I practically began the film rooting against the team simply because they were stealing something that was ostensibly for her. There were plenty of good things in Topkapi to win me back, and she isn't on screen during the best parts of the movie, so I still enjoyed my time with it. There are certainly better heist/caper films that I've seen, but Topkapi has all the right qualities to be on that list. I will probably even give it another try in the future, and perhaps my complaints won't bother me so much then.
Geez, I can't get over all the sour comments about this film on this site. Long? Boring? These must be the feelings of MTV kids who can't focus on an image for longer than thirty seconds... For the rest of you looking for the perfect caper film, look no farther. Exotic locale... great cast... memorable score... Topkapi has it all. In my opinion, this is a far superior film to Jules Dassin's earlier Riffifi. Topkapi is glamorous, funny, exciting -- but above all, fun.
Before "Mission Impossible" made every big heist a challenge for technology, there were movie efforts like "Topkapi" which played the human element in the big scam.
A wonderful and truly international cast is assembled here for this 60's effort that showcases Istanbul. Melina Mercouri is marvelous, blending humor and sensuality with her hard side. Maximillian Schell is excellent as the leading man with all the answers while Peter Ustinov is the classic bumbler. Akim Tamiroff adds additional levity as the irascible cook.
Not sure I was totally satisfied with the outcome but it's such a rollicking and colorful ride, give director Jules Dassin top marks anyway.
A wonderful and truly international cast is assembled here for this 60's effort that showcases Istanbul. Melina Mercouri is marvelous, blending humor and sensuality with her hard side. Maximillian Schell is excellent as the leading man with all the answers while Peter Ustinov is the classic bumbler. Akim Tamiroff adds additional levity as the irascible cook.
Not sure I was totally satisfied with the outcome but it's such a rollicking and colorful ride, give director Jules Dassin top marks anyway.
The film talks a hold-up to Turkish museum carried out by a motley group : Melina Mercouri , Maximiliam Schell , Jess Hahn , Gilles Segal . They are pursued by a chief policeman who blackmails to Peter Ustinov to get undercover in the band.
From the beginning until ending the good mood and humor is continued . The plot is very amusing and the final has got an extraordinary surprise . In the movie there are comedy , action , tongue-in-cheek , giggles and results to be very bemusing . The highlight and great climax , of course , is the heist which is developed with imposing tension and intrigue . The robbing has been imitated thousand times in European films as well as American movies (Mission impossible). This picture along with ¨Rififi¨(also by Jules Dassin) created during the 60s and forward an authentic genre .
The title of the film refers to the Topkapi palace built by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II in 1459, after the fall of the Byzantine Empire , the Ottoman sultans made their main residence in the Topkapi palace for 400 years , it became a museum in 1924 . The motion picture attained a lot of success and originated copies , rip offs and awful imitations . Actors's interpretation are excellent , Peter Ustinov is magnificent and Robert Morley is top-notch specially . Manos Hadjidakis' musical score is cheerful and enjoyable . The picture was very well directed by Jules Dassin (Melina Mercouri's husband).
The yarn will appeal to comedy enthusiasts and robbery genre fans . Rating : Above average . Well worth watching .
From the beginning until ending the good mood and humor is continued . The plot is very amusing and the final has got an extraordinary surprise . In the movie there are comedy , action , tongue-in-cheek , giggles and results to be very bemusing . The highlight and great climax , of course , is the heist which is developed with imposing tension and intrigue . The robbing has been imitated thousand times in European films as well as American movies (Mission impossible). This picture along with ¨Rififi¨(also by Jules Dassin) created during the 60s and forward an authentic genre .
The title of the film refers to the Topkapi palace built by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II in 1459, after the fall of the Byzantine Empire , the Ottoman sultans made their main residence in the Topkapi palace for 400 years , it became a museum in 1924 . The motion picture attained a lot of success and originated copies , rip offs and awful imitations . Actors's interpretation are excellent , Peter Ustinov is magnificent and Robert Morley is top-notch specially . Manos Hadjidakis' musical score is cheerful and enjoyable . The picture was very well directed by Jules Dassin (Melina Mercouri's husband).
The yarn will appeal to comedy enthusiasts and robbery genre fans . Rating : Above average . Well worth watching .
Jules Dassin's Topkapi was one of the lavish heist movies, set in touristy locales, that were all the vogue four decades ago. And Dassin executes the heist itself -- of an emerald-encrusted dagger from the famed museum in Istanbul -- with grace, precision and suspense. But it's a very long time coming.
Dassin seems reluctant even to start the movie, dilly-dallying with a proto-psychedelic opening sequence involving games of chance and glittering gems. Then Melina Mercouri, shot in an iridescent haze, bulldozes her way out to address the audience but fails owing to her thick-as-moussaka accent. Finally we get to the rounding up of the gang of amateurs who will pull off the caper: mastermind Maximilian Schell, Robert Morley, Peter Ustinov, Gilles Segal (as a deaf-mute gymnast), and Mercouri.
The plotting and rehearsing of the crime take up most of the movie, leaving us to be entertained by the characters, none of which is really written. So instead we get each actor's idiosyncratic bag of tricks. And while Morley and Ustinov reliably amuse us, Schell flaunts his Continental-cool duds with a smug smirk frozen on his face. Mercouri, meanwhile, vamps it up like a demented drag queen doing Joan Crawford. What little friction exists among the cast members gets played for laughs -- no subversive subplots, no separate agendas are afoot.
Dassin made his reputation directing tough, unsentimental films in the noir cycle: Brute Force, Thieves' Highway, Night and the City. When forced back to Europe by the Hollywood blacklist, he did a superior caper film, Rififi; Topkapi seems a belated attempt to recapture it. But the chilled-down, ironic style that came into fashion in the early 1960s doesn't suit his earnest talents. Topkapi remains professional and pleasant but is now looking more and more like a period piece.
Dassin seems reluctant even to start the movie, dilly-dallying with a proto-psychedelic opening sequence involving games of chance and glittering gems. Then Melina Mercouri, shot in an iridescent haze, bulldozes her way out to address the audience but fails owing to her thick-as-moussaka accent. Finally we get to the rounding up of the gang of amateurs who will pull off the caper: mastermind Maximilian Schell, Robert Morley, Peter Ustinov, Gilles Segal (as a deaf-mute gymnast), and Mercouri.
The plotting and rehearsing of the crime take up most of the movie, leaving us to be entertained by the characters, none of which is really written. So instead we get each actor's idiosyncratic bag of tricks. And while Morley and Ustinov reliably amuse us, Schell flaunts his Continental-cool duds with a smug smirk frozen on his face. Mercouri, meanwhile, vamps it up like a demented drag queen doing Joan Crawford. What little friction exists among the cast members gets played for laughs -- no subversive subplots, no separate agendas are afoot.
Dassin made his reputation directing tough, unsentimental films in the noir cycle: Brute Force, Thieves' Highway, Night and the City. When forced back to Europe by the Hollywood blacklist, he did a superior caper film, Rififi; Topkapi seems a belated attempt to recapture it. But the chilled-down, ironic style that came into fashion in the early 1960s doesn't suit his earnest talents. Topkapi remains professional and pleasant but is now looking more and more like a period piece.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizCited by Missione impossibile (1966) series creator Bruce Geller as the inspiration for his own series.
- BlooperWhile in the lighthouse during the caper, Cedric wipes his face with an oily rag, but all the following scenes show no oil on his face. However as he is next seen at the wrestling ground it is fair to assume that he was advised of the oil on his face and cleaned it off.
- Citazioni
Elizabeth Lipp: Do you mind that I am a nymphomaniac?
Walter Harper: It's your most endearing quality.
Elizabeth Lipp: Don't waste it - use it.
- Curiosità sui creditiAt the beginning, the title and the technical credits are shown, but no credit is given to the actors or to the producer-director. However, at the end, the words "There they go again!" are seen, and all of the leading actors appear in a snowbound setting, together with their names. Then the names of all of the other actors, together with the name of the producer-director, appear on the screen.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The 75th Annual Academy Awards (2003)
- Colonne sonoreThe Stars and Stripes Forever
(uncredited) (1896)
Written by John Philip Sousa
Played when Elizabeth steps on Cedric's mock-up of the security platform
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 7.000.000 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.66 : 1
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