Come rubare un milione di dollari e vivere felici
Titolo originale: How to Steal a Million
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,5/10
31.293
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
La figlia di un falsario d'arte si allea con un ladro per rubare uno dei falsi del padre e proteggere il suo segreto.La figlia di un falsario d'arte si allea con un ladro per rubare uno dei falsi del padre e proteggere il suo segreto.La figlia di un falsario d'arte si allea con un ladro per rubare uno dei falsi del padre e proteggere il suo segreto.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 1 candidatura in totale
Roger Tréville
- Auctioneer
- (as Roger Treville)
Edward Malin
- Insurance Clerk
- (as Eddie Malin)
Georg Stanford Brown
- Waiter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Louise Chevalier
- Cleaning Woman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Rémy Longa
- Young Man
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Pierre Mirat
- Guard
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jacques Ramade
- Guard
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Olga Valéry
- Lady with the dog
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
A charming adventure comedy. It revolves around good-hearted art forgery and the need to set thing right. The basic plot is rather implausible, but it hardly matters. There is a great chemistry between the primary characters and the story is pleasantly devoid of attributes that would prevent the film from being enjoyed by anybody from 10 years-old and up. The blend of mild suspense, gentle comedy and a bit of romance is not too intellectually provocative, but it makes for great fun. It's a film I can sit down an watch with my teenage daughter, my younger son, my wife and my mother, and everybody has a good time and comes away feeling better than when they sat down.
HOW TO STEAL A MILLION is a romantic crime drama film which, through an illusion of fiction, merges art and fraud. A clumsy fraud, mixed with a pleasant romance, can quickly enter in our hearts.
Charles Bonnet is well-known as an art collector, but actually he copies famous works of art. His daughter Nicole disapproves his "work" and is also afraid that he may get caught. His replica of a famed Cellini sculpture is inadvertently displayed in an art museum, and he begins to worry that he'll lose his reputation once the experts evaluate the statuette. Nicole decides to steal sculpture from the museum with the help of a mysterious burglar. However, her assistant is actually a well-known private detective who investigates frauds of her father...
A simple story with lot flaws is enriched with a very thrilling twist. The film is full of fictional tricks, through which it develops a delicious romance. Mr. Wyler has managed to create a frivolous version of double deception. He has, through a healthy dose of humor, emphasized Mrs. Hepburn style. A scene with a key is probably one of the most memorable. I think that a key has a double meaning in this case. This is a key to the heart and the truth.
Audrey Hepburn as Nicole Bonnet is, as always, a magic woman, this time in the role of a romantic rich girl and morally sensitive daughter at the same time. Peter O'Toole as Simon Dermott is a calm seducer, between an eccentric detective and inexperienced burglar. All for love. There's good chemistry between the two of them.
Hugh Griffith as Charles Bonnet is funny an art counterfeiter. Eli Wallach as Davis Leland is crazed collector, who effectively shows the characteristics of a sexual perversion.
Every art is a kind of deception!? Each theft is a form of art!? However, it is very difficult to mislead or steal one's heart.
Charles Bonnet is well-known as an art collector, but actually he copies famous works of art. His daughter Nicole disapproves his "work" and is also afraid that he may get caught. His replica of a famed Cellini sculpture is inadvertently displayed in an art museum, and he begins to worry that he'll lose his reputation once the experts evaluate the statuette. Nicole decides to steal sculpture from the museum with the help of a mysterious burglar. However, her assistant is actually a well-known private detective who investigates frauds of her father...
A simple story with lot flaws is enriched with a very thrilling twist. The film is full of fictional tricks, through which it develops a delicious romance. Mr. Wyler has managed to create a frivolous version of double deception. He has, through a healthy dose of humor, emphasized Mrs. Hepburn style. A scene with a key is probably one of the most memorable. I think that a key has a double meaning in this case. This is a key to the heart and the truth.
Audrey Hepburn as Nicole Bonnet is, as always, a magic woman, this time in the role of a romantic rich girl and morally sensitive daughter at the same time. Peter O'Toole as Simon Dermott is a calm seducer, between an eccentric detective and inexperienced burglar. All for love. There's good chemistry between the two of them.
Hugh Griffith as Charles Bonnet is funny an art counterfeiter. Eli Wallach as Davis Leland is crazed collector, who effectively shows the characteristics of a sexual perversion.
Every art is a kind of deception!? Each theft is a form of art!? However, it is very difficult to mislead or steal one's heart.
Peter O'Toole shows Audrey Hepburn "How to Steal a Million" in this 1966 caper film directed by William Wyler. The film also stars Eli Wallach, Hugh Griffith, Charles Boyer, and Fernand Gravey.
Hepburn plays Nicole, the daughter of a renowned art collector, Bonnet (Griffith), who in fact is not a collector but an expert forger. He has lent his famous Cellini Venus to the Paris Art Museum, only to find out that before it can be insured, there will be a technical test to assure its authenticity.
Since it's a sculpture, and the chemical makeup was different from the material in the 14th century, the forgery will be easy to detect.
In order to help her father, Nicole Bonnet contacts Simon Dermott {O'Toole) whom she caught when he broke into the house she shares with her father, and asks him to steal the Venus from the museum.
In the '60s, caper films were all the rage, and it would be hard to miss with two such beautiful and sophisticated stars as Hepburn and O'Toole. Their chemistry is great, the caper is clever, and the dialogue is witty.
The supporting cast is excellent; someone said Eli Wallach was miscast as an obsessive collector. Originally Wyler cast George G. Scott, but he was replaced when he arrived on the set late. Scott would have been more tycoon-like.
Like bubbly champagne, "How to Steal a Million" tickles and delights throughout.
Highly recommended.
Hepburn plays Nicole, the daughter of a renowned art collector, Bonnet (Griffith), who in fact is not a collector but an expert forger. He has lent his famous Cellini Venus to the Paris Art Museum, only to find out that before it can be insured, there will be a technical test to assure its authenticity.
Since it's a sculpture, and the chemical makeup was different from the material in the 14th century, the forgery will be easy to detect.
In order to help her father, Nicole Bonnet contacts Simon Dermott {O'Toole) whom she caught when he broke into the house she shares with her father, and asks him to steal the Venus from the museum.
In the '60s, caper films were all the rage, and it would be hard to miss with two such beautiful and sophisticated stars as Hepburn and O'Toole. Their chemistry is great, the caper is clever, and the dialogue is witty.
The supporting cast is excellent; someone said Eli Wallach was miscast as an obsessive collector. Originally Wyler cast George G. Scott, but he was replaced when he arrived on the set late. Scott would have been more tycoon-like.
Like bubbly champagne, "How to Steal a Million" tickles and delights throughout.
Highly recommended.
If you are searching for a movie with wit, charm and delightful comedy in it, you've found it. "How to Steal a Million" is perhaps one of the finest Audrey Hepburn's films around. It's the story of a reclusive though slightly devious painter and forger (Hugh Griffith) Charles Bonnet who aside from his practice of recreating masterpieces and selling them to eccentric private collectors decides to donate a priceless but fake sculpture from his private collection to the La Fayette museum to be viewed by the general public. Not wanting to lose it to theft without compensation, the museum insures it for $1,000.000 dollars. However the insurance company wants it appraised to see if it's genuine and calls in an expert who will use modern techniques to ascertain it's authenticity. If it's discovered to be a fake, the painter, his reputation and his family will be ruined. Thus his beautiful daughter Nicole (Audrey Hepburn) must hire master bugler Simon Dermott, (Peter O'Toole) to steal it from the heavily guarded museum. At the same time, she is being pursued by Davis Leland (Eli Wallach) an American millionaire who wants to marry her. What neither Nicole, nor her father suspect is that Mr. Dermott is more than a shy bugler, he too is interested in the painter's secret hobby and his daughter. Excellent film for the family. ****
Somehow Audrey Hepburn made fluffy romantic caper movies look
like high art. Take this adorable trifle directed by William Wyler
with Audrey looking glorious in her trademark Givenchy clothing.
Audrey could have phone in a performance, but she's totally
enchanting as always, making us overlook the seams in the script.
She's beautifully supported by Peter O'Toole, who never looked
handsomer or more Cary Grant-ish in his life as Simon, the art
expert who gets talked into stealing Audrey's father's statue of the
Cellini Venus back from the museum when it is learned the statue
has to be authenticated for insurance purposes.
Hugh Griffith, as Audrey's father, is a delightful rogue of an art
forger and Charles Boyer and Eli Wallach just add to the fun. The
actual theft of the statue is quite ingenious, if a little too drawn out.
Still, here's two hours of pure enchantment. That Ferrari still looks
good nearly forty years later, and if Audrey was walking down Fifth
Avenue, dressed in Givenchy's stunning creations today, she'd
cause a riot. Check out that lace cocktail dress with the matching
lace mask at the bar of the Ritz in Paris! It doesn't get any chicer
than this.
like high art. Take this adorable trifle directed by William Wyler
with Audrey looking glorious in her trademark Givenchy clothing.
Audrey could have phone in a performance, but she's totally
enchanting as always, making us overlook the seams in the script.
She's beautifully supported by Peter O'Toole, who never looked
handsomer or more Cary Grant-ish in his life as Simon, the art
expert who gets talked into stealing Audrey's father's statue of the
Cellini Venus back from the museum when it is learned the statue
has to be authenticated for insurance purposes.
Hugh Griffith, as Audrey's father, is a delightful rogue of an art
forger and Charles Boyer and Eli Wallach just add to the fun. The
actual theft of the statue is quite ingenious, if a little too drawn out.
Still, here's two hours of pure enchantment. That Ferrari still looks
good nearly forty years later, and if Audrey was walking down Fifth
Avenue, dressed in Givenchy's stunning creations today, she'd
cause a riot. Check out that lace cocktail dress with the matching
lace mask at the bar of the Ritz in Paris! It doesn't get any chicer
than this.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWalter Matthau was the first choice for the Eli Wallach part but was asking $200,000, so the producers opted for the less expensive George C. Scott. Scott had been on the set for a few weeks before shooting began. However, on his first day of shooting, he didn't show up until after lunch, and director William Wyler decided to fire him. He was already finding it difficult to handle two heavy drinkers, Peter O'Toole and Hugh Griffith, and the prospect of a third was just too overwhelming. On hearing of Scott's removal from the production, Audrey Hepburn became quite inconsolable.
- BlooperWhen Bonnet gives the curator the statue, the curator touches the white marble with his bare hands. A real curator would never touch a marble work of art with bare hands, as the oils from the skin can stain the marble, turning it yellow. Curators always wear white gloves before touching any work of art.
- Citazioni
[Nicole describes the burglar to her Papa]
Nicole Bonnet: Well, it was pitch dark and there he was. Tall, blue eyes, slim, quite good-looking... in a brutal, mean way, Papa. A terrible man!
- ConnessioniFeatured in Star Wars: Music by John Williams (1980)
- Colonne sonoreLa Marseillaise
(1792) (uncredited)
Written by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle
In the score when the statue is transported to the museum
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Cómo robar un millón de dólares
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, Francia(Bonnet's house at junction Rue Parmentier & Boulevard Bineau, now demolished)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 6.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 2h 3min(123 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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