CitizenCaine

Silver Bears (1977)

screenshot from Silver Bears

Directed by: Ivan Passer
Screenwriter(s): Peter Stone (from the novel by Paul Erdman)
Starring: Michael Caine, Louis Jourdan, David Warner, Cybill Shepherd, Jay Leno, Tom Smothers
Genre: Comedy / Heist
Country: UK / USA
Running time: 1h 53m
Rating: 7 out of 10

Doc Fletcher (Caine) is a Mafia money launderer who wants to branch out on a pet project of his own – getting a Swiss bank up and running to launder the Mob's money. His boss has reluctantly agreed, on the condition that his ne'er-do-well son and heir (an early part for Jay Leno) goes with Fletcher to Switzerland. Along with a bodyguard, they set off for Lugano, where the impoverished Prince di Siracusa (Louis Jourdan) is supposed to have set them up with a bank. When they get there, they find that the Prince has bought them a room above a pizzeria and ‘invested’ the rest of the money in a get-rich-quick scheme involving Moroccan silver.

This is probably one of the least well-known Caine films, having been unsuccessful at the box office and little-seen on TV, but this is a real shame, as it's a witty and twisting little comedy thriller, not dissimilar in tone to both Gambit and The Italian Job, and perfectly suited to the small screen. Stone, a veteran screenwriter of exactly this sort of charming fare (Father Goose, Charade), has put together a complex but perfectly paced script which constantly keeps you guessing, without ever really worrying that Caine won't come right in the end.

In addition to Jourdan and Leno, there's excellent support from David Warner, Tom Smothers (a comedian better known in the US than in Britain) and Martin Balsam. Leno is a particularly revelation, especially if you're not familiar with his acting work, providing a certain charm to the brash but dim heir apparent role. It's a shame that Shepherd was chosen as Caine's married love interest, as she is too shrill to carry off what is clearly meant to be a screwball-comedy heroine in the same vein as Barbra Streisand in What's Up Doc?

Hard to get a hold of, as it's been deleted in the UK for some time, but well worth searching out.