Michael Caine names his five favourite movies of all time

Most find their opinion of their favourite movie gradually shifting over time as they broaden their horizons and experience more of what cinema has to offer, but Michael Caine has never been interest in placing himself in that boat.

Anytime the legendary actor is asked which movie he loves more than any other, the answer always remains the same, and it stars his favourite talent to ever grace the screen to boot. Caine has never been one to downplay his adoration of Humphrey Bogart, who stands alone as Caine’s number one acting idol.

As well as deriving his stage name from Bogart’s 1954 military drama The Caine Mutiny, it’s well-known that the two-time Academy Award winner is borderline obsessed with Casablanca. Caine has spent decades waxing lyrical on the seminal romantic epic, so it’s hardly a surprise that he’d seize the opportunity once again when pressed to name the five features he views at the top of the pile.

In another wholly unsurprising development, his favourite director appears more than once, too. It must have been the biggest pinch-me moment of Caine’s professional life when he worked with John Huston on 1975 adventure The Man Who Would Be King, never mind the fact he got to do it again several years later when he co-starred with an eclectic array of movie stars and footballers in Escape to Victory.

Reflecting on his favoured five with Rotten Tomatoes, Huston and Bogart were well-represented. Opening his eyes to a new style of cinema, Caine recalled The Maltese Falcon as being “the first time I’d ever seen what they call a film noir,” while it was the dynamic duo’s The Treasure of the Sierra Madre that led him to reflect how “if you ever heard the voice of god, it would be John Huston.”

Naturally, Casablanca makes its obligatory appearance with Caine singling out his love for the verbiage, celebrating the timeless great for being “full of dialogue.” It isn’t all about Huston and Bogart, though, with Carol Reed’s The Third Man making an appearance on the cockney superstar’s all-time list thanks partially to Orson Welles’ grandstanding cuckoo clock monologue.

Star-studded rom-com Charade boasts Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn, Walter Matthau, James Coburn, and George Kennedy among its ensemble, but one “wonderful moment” between the two leading lights stood out. “They’re having a row and she says, ‘You know what’s wrong with you, don’t you?,'” Caine recalled. “He says, ‘What?’. And she says, ‘Nothing.'”

A clear appreciation for the ‘Golden Age’ of Hollywood then, with the likes of Huston, Bogart, Welles, Grant, and Hepburn all playing their part in searing themselves into Caine’s cinematic consciousness.

Michael Caine’s five favourite movies:

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