da best caper film: "Big Deal on Madonna Street" (1958)
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Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — General Discussion
Paul P. Powell — 3 months ago(December 21, 2025 09:33 PM)
It might surprise you to hear –considering the high number of caper flicks Hollywood releases –but the best caper movie of all time, comes from Italy.
Not a lot of people outside Italy, have likely ever heard of it. And it is not at all easy to locate.
But it has been inducted into Italy's 'masterpieces of Italian cinema'.
And it is also in the Criterion Collection under the title, "
The Big Deal on the Street of Madonnas".
This is the correct translation for what was mangled by distributors into,
'Big Deal on Madonna Street".
The title goof –just a minor flub –an insignificant slipup – if connected with any other film would be innocuous – aptly illustrates the clumsy, falling-down world housed inside this unique movie.
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The movie posters for this 'heist' film are also misleading. It's dotted with three big stars; none of whom were big names when the shooting was underway.
Marquees featured instead, the name 'Toto', a household name in Italian comedy in the '50s.
'Toto' –quite aged at the time of release –is certainly quirky / crotchety in a minor role as a safecracking expert hired by "the gang" (the rest of the cast).
But even though he's a talented comedian, he doesn't have any laugh-out-loud moments in this plot.
Nor does anyone else. Thus, the trailer and all the rest of the advertising for this flick, is as askew as the posters.
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The trailer: also askew. It would lead anyone to assume this caper flick is an homage to 1930s screwball comedies. It isn't.
There are no big laughs; although there are many slapstick pratfalls and bits of physical humor in this "heist gone wrong" premise.
All the 'bungling burglars' horseplay present, is but all hoary old chestnuts from the era of vaudeville. Nothing new at all.
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But, '
Madonna Street'
it is not truly a comedy. Everyone simply calls it a comedy because there's no other term which fits.
If truth be told, it is more like an 'ode' or a 'paean' to Italian life. An homage. A love song. A poem.
The kind of humor this movie unfolds is more like: drollery. Tongue-in-cheeck charm.
It is gently, sweetly amusing. Filled with love for stupid, fumbling, hapless, helpless Italians.
Anyone who has ever been to Italy immediately recognizes what this yarn faithfully depicts: the all-encompassing dizziness and incompetence of the Italian penninsula.
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There's a 'bizarro-world', an alternate universe inside this Italian production. It's fully as unique as the zany America of "
It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World"
.
An adroit, threadbare little comedy –shot on a shoestring budget –is quite as perceptive about Italians as Zinneman was about Southern Californians.
In both cases, the 'alternate world' is more truly the real one.
The whole project before the camera –or behind the camera –celebrates Italy's endless errors and mishaps.
Actors from the wrong country, wrong region, wrong dialect, shooting scenes on the wrong street with the wrong name.
Dubbing was never gotten right, but on the other hand subtitles can't keep up with the dialogue.
Some of the movie's stars were untrained amateurs at the time; unable to recite their lines.
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There's a reason why Italy hasn't won a war in centuries; there's a reason why Italian government topples seemingly every twenty years.
It's the same reason their trains never run on time, why their elections are always bitter, why their lovers are always being caught '
in flagrante delecto
' and why traffic is always mayhem.
Italians are the perennial laughingstock of Europe. This is not something made-up for a sitcom, it's a real thing which no one can explain.
So it's simply a trip through the wacky world of all those wacky Italians.
This makes it the all-time greatest "comedy of errors" every made.
The would-be thieves are so woefully, pathetically clumsy you can't help but fall in love with them.
They're so inept its far beyond being their own fault –the film is poking fun at the whole Italian peninsula.
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Plainly, flatly stated: everything in the heist goes wrong.
Every inspiration, every idea, every maneuver, every tactic this heist needs to succeed. Everything is wrong from the very start.
It's not just one thing that collapses; it's every thing. There's simply no way this ludicrous gaggle of small-time misfits could ever pull off a real burglary.
But they don't know this, and that is the stymied, stifled hoot behind this romp.
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I've rarely seen a sweeter yarn. Everything goes wrong –this is the theme of the story –but at the finale you see that life's accidents result in more magic than if everything went right.
This makes it much more than any other caper film can claim.
Get what I mean?
Although 'Madonna St' ostensibly follows a heist storyline – the heist arguably never takes place.
Why? It's impossible to carry out a precisely-planned operation in Italy.
This is what the 'gang' slowly discovers.
So the movie is a send-up of heist movies in general and
Italian life in general.
The director embraces disaster as he succeeds with the story. He