LONDON.- Which is the best? The Italian Job? The Ipcress File or Alfie? When it comes to the classic 1960s films of Michael Caine, fans can hold passionate views.
But when it comes to collecting posters of the Caine films, there is no dispute as to which stands out: None of them.
In fact, according to film poster auction specialist Alastair McCrea, it is the 1971 northern gangster film Get Carter that ranks head and shoulders above the rest.
McCrea, whose Entertainment & Sporting Memorabilia department at
Ewbanks in Surrey takes over £1.5 million in sales each year, will be offering half a dozen Caine movie classics in his next Vintage Posters auction on April 22.
All are in fine or close to perfect condition and they range from The Ipcress File in 1965 to Get Carter in 1971, including Alfie (1966), Funeral in Berlin (1966), The Italian Job (1969) and a US version of The Ipcress File (1965), with a very different design from the British classic.
Kept in a drawer for the past 20 years
Top estimate of the Caine offering is £2,500-3,500 for the 30 x 40 British Quad poster for Get Carter, which has been stored in a drawer since the owner bought it at Christies 20 years ago.
The film charts the bloody revenge of Jack Carter (Caine), a London gangster who returns home to the North East to investigate his brothers suspicious death.
Apart from Caines strong-but-silent-type and visceral performance, the film is notable for an impressively chilling turn by the late playwright John Osborne, as well as the casting of Britt Ekland as Jacks girlfriend Anna, a highly controversial role.
It did ok on its release but didnt make the sort of impact as Michael Caines earlier landmark films, says McCrea. That may have been because of its gritty and often violent realism, showing the bleak landscapes of the north during the corruption of the post-war redevelopment years.
Until then, audiences had generally only seen Caine as a glamorous actor The Italian Job was released just two years earlier and this was the role that he used to break the mould.
The muted response to the film meant it faded from public consciousness within weeks.
However, that all changed when it was released on video in 1993 and its reputation soared, gathering a cult following, says McCrea.
Fans include Quentin Tarantino and Guy Ritchie, whose influence helped boost its credentials.
So much so, that in 1999 it was ranked 16th in the British Film Institutes Top 100 British films of the 20th century, McCrea reveals. And in 2004 Total Film magazine named it the greatest British film ever made.
On the 50th anniversary of Get Carters release in March last year, journalist Roger Domeneghetti hailed it as The movie that transformed the North East.
If Ritchie is the master of the British gangster film revival, with titles like Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels and Layer Cake, Mike Hodges 1971 classic, Get Carter, is the inspiration that made it all possible, says McCrea.
Now he expects the recent sale of the Michael Caine Collection at Bonhams, together with the lauded remake of The Ipcress File, currently showing on ITV, to boost demand for the vintage posters on April 22.
They are all fabulous designs for landmark films starring one of our most iconic actors. All are in fine to near-mint condition and when you consider their size, they provide one of the best-value impacts of what we like to call wall-power for any collector.