Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0

Nicole

Harry

Shahbandar

Ram

Abdul

Emile

Colonel Salim

Hotel Clerk

Restaurant Manager (uncredited)

Airport Official (uncredited)

Head Porter (uncredited)

Garage Attendant (uncredited)

Lighter Fluid Saleswoman (uncredited)

Plainclothes Officer at TWA Counter (uncredited)

Bellhop (uncredited)

Arab on Telephone (uncredited)

Commuter at Airport (uncredited)

Departing Airline Passenger (uncredited)

Citizen (uncredited)

Cafe Patron (uncredited)

Cafe Patron (uncredited)

Cafe Patron (uncredited)

Bellhop (uncredited)

Cafe Patron (uncredited)

Citizen (uncredited)

Hotel Guest (uncredited)

Man in Black Sedan (uncredited)

Airline Hostess (uncredited)

Security Guard (uncredited)

Arab (uncredited)

Citizen (uncredited)

Servant (uncredited)

Departing Plane Passenger (uncredited)

Nightclub Patron (uncredited)

Commuter at Airport (uncredited)

Nightclub Patron (uncredited)

Bellhop (uncredited)

Cafe Patron (uncredited)

Hawker (uncredited)

Citizen (uncredited)

Man in Black Sedan (uncredited)

Immigration Agent (uncredited)

Departing Plane Passenger (uncredited)

Nightclub Patron (uncredited)

Airport Official (uncredited)

Hotel Guest (uncredited)

Flamenco Dancer (uncredited)

Cafe Patron (uncredited)

Guard (uncredited)

Airport Official (uncredited)

Taxi Driver (uncredited)

Nightclub Patron (uncredited)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2024-09-02
When you hear the opening bars of the score to this, you immediately think of "Lawrence of Arabia" - it has the hallmark of Maurice Jarre long before anyone has to blow any bloody doors off! Thereafter, it's a fun, classy little crime caper which sees Michael Caine recruit Shirley MacLaine to help fleece reclusive billionaire Herbert Lom of a priceless bust from his burglar-proof penthouse suite. The story is fast paced with plenty of gadgets and some quite witty dialogue; MacLaine is great as the not so daft foil to Caine's crooked faux-aristocrat, but Lom steals this as the not so gullible mark. Arnold Moss and John Abbott also turn in good, if brief, performances with the latter definitely getting the last