Celebrities » Michael Caine » Biography
Birthday:
Mar 14, 1933
Birthplace:
Rotherhithe, London, England

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Emilio P

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Michael Caine Biography

Icon of British cool in the 1960s, leading action star in the late '70s, and knighted into official respectability in 1993, Michael Caine has enjoyed a long, varied, and enviably prolific career. Although he played a part in some notable cinematic failures, particularly during the 1980s, Caine remains one of the most established performers in the business, serving as a role model for actors and filmmakers young and old. The son of a fish-porter father and a charwoman mother, Caine's beginnings were less than glamorous. Born Maurice Micklewhite in 1943, in the squalid South London neighborhood of Bermondsey, Caine got his first taste of the world beyond when he was evacuated to the countryside during World War II. A misfit in school, the military (he served during the Korean War), and the job pool, Caine found acceptance after answering a want ad for an assistant stage manager at the Horsham Repertory Company. Already star struck thanks to incessant filmgoing, Caine naturally took to acting, even though the life of a British regional actor was one step away from abject poverty. Changing his last name from Micklewhite to Caine in tribute to one of his favorite movies, The Caine Mutiny (1954), the actor toiled in obscurity in unbilled film bits and TV walk-ons from 1956 through 1962, occasionally obtaining leads on a TV series based on the Edgar Wallace mysteries. Caine's big break occurred in 1963, when he was cast in a leading role in the epic, star-studded historical adventure film Zulu. Suddenly finding himself bearing a modicum of importance in the British film industry, the actor next played Harry Palmer, the bespectacled, iconoclastic secret agent protagonist of The Ipcress File (1965); he would go on to reprise the role in two more films, Funeral in Berlin (1966) and The Billion Dollar Brain (1967). After 12 years of obscure and unappreciated work, Caine was glibly hailed as an "overnight star," and with the success of The Ipcress Files, advanced to a new role as a major industry player. He went on to gain international fame in his next film, Alfie (1966), in which he played the title character, a gleefully cheeky, womanizing cockney lad. For his portrayal of Alfie, Caine was rewarded with a Golden Globe award and an Oscar nomination. One of the most popular action stars of the late '60s and early '70s, Caine had leading roles in films such as the classic 1969 action comedy The Italian Job (considered by many to be the celluloid manifestation of all that was hip in Britain at the time); Joseph L. Manckiewic's Sleuth (1972), in which he starred opposite Laurence Olivier and won his second Oscar nomination; and The Man Who Would Be King (1976), which cast him alongside Sean Connery. During the 1980s, Caine gained additional acclaim with an Oscar nomination for Educating Rita (1983) and a 1986 Best Supporting Actor Oscar for Hannah and Her Sisters. He had a dastardly turn as an underworld kingpin in Neil Jordan's small but fervently praised Mona Lisa, and two years later once again proved his comic talents with the hit comedy Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, in which he and Steve Martin starred as scheming con artists. Although Caine was no less prolific during the 1990s, his career began to falter with a series of lackluster films. Among the disappointments were Steven Seagal's environmental action flick On Deadly Ground (1994) and Blood and Wine, a 1996 thriller in which he starred with Jack Nicholson and Judy Davis. In the late '90s, Caine began to rebound, appearing in the acclaimed independent film Little Voice (1998), for which he won a Golden Globe for his portrayal of a seedy talent agent. In addition, Caine -- or Sir Michael, as he was called after receiving his knighthood in 2000 -- got a new audience through his television work, starring in the 1997 miniseries Mandela and de Klerk. The actor, who was ranked 55 in Empire Magazine's 1997 Top 100 Actors of All Time list, also kept busy as the co-owner of a successful London restaurant, and enjoyed a new wave of appreciation from younger filmmakers who praised him as the film industry's enduring model of British cool. This appreciation was further evidenced in 2000, when Caine was honored with a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for his portrayal of an abortionist in The Cider House Rules. After launching the new millennium with both a revitalized career momentum and newfound popularity among fans who were too young to appreciate his early efforts, Caine once again scored a hit with the art-house circuit as the torturous Dr Royer-Collard in director Phillip Kaufman's Quills. Later paid homage by Hollywood icon Sylvester Stallone when the muscle-bound actor stepped into Caine's well-worn shoes for a remake of Get Carter (in which Caine also appeared in a minor role) the actor would gain positive notice the following year for his turn as a friend attempting to keep a promise in Last Orders. As if the Get Carter remake wasn't enought to emphasize Caine's coolness to a new generation of moviegoers, his turn as bespectacled super-spy Austin Powers' father in Austin Powers in Goldfinger proved that even years beyond The Italian Job Caine was still at the top of his game. Moving seamlessly from kitsch to stirring drama, Caine's role in 2002's The Quiet American earned the actor not only some of the best reviews of his later career, but another Oscar nomination as well. Caine had long demonstrated an unusual versatility that made him a cult favorite with popular and arthouse audiences, but as the decade wore on, he demonstrated more box-office savvy by pursuing increasingly lucrative audience pleasers, almost exclusively for a period of time. The thesp first resusciated the triumph of his Muppet role with a brief return to family-friendly material in Disney's Secondhand Lions, alongside screen legend Robert Duvall (Tender Mercies, The Apostle). The two play quirky great-uncles to a maladjusted adolescent boy (Haley Joel Osment), who take the child for the summer as a guest on their Texas ranch. The film elicited mediocre reviews (Carrie Rickey termed it "edgeless as a marshmallow and twice as syrupy") but scored with ticket buyers during its initial fall 2003 run. Caine then co-starred with Christopher Walken and Josh Lucas in the family issues drama Around the Bend (2004). In 2005, perhaps cued by the bankability of Goldfinger and Lions, Caine landed a couple of additional turns in Hollywood A-listers. In that year's Nicole Kidman/Will Ferrell starrer Bewitched, he plays Nigel Bigelow, Kidman's ever philandering warlock father. Even as critics wrote the vehicle off as a turkey, audiences didn't listen, and it did outstanding business, doubtless helped by the weight of old pros Caine and Shirley Maclaine. That same year's franchise prequel Batman Begins not only grossed dollar one, but handed Caine some of his most favorable notices to date, as he inherited the role of Bruce Wayne's butler, a role he would return to in both of the film's sequels, The Dark Knight and The Dark Knight Rises. Caine contributed an elegiac portrayal to Gore Verbinski's quirky late 2005 character drama The Weatherman, as Robert Spritz, the novelist father of Nic Cage's David Spritz, who casts a giant shadow over the young man. In 2006, Caine joined the cast of the esteemed Alfonso Cuaron's dystopian sci-fi drama Children of Men, and lent a supporting role to Memento helmer Christopher Nolan's psychological thriller The Prestige. In 2009 Caine starred as the title character in Harry Brown, a thriller about a senior citizen vigilante, and the next year worked with Nolan yet again on the mind-bending Inception. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

Michael Caine Trivia

Michael Caine said once: 'Actors, as I am, play different characters and change her aspect through moustaches, wigs... A star, however, plays always the same role, no matter he is a farmer in Iowa or the president of United States'
- submitted by Emilio P (2 years ago)

Quotes from Michael Caine's Characters

    1. Alfred Pennyworth: Why do we fall, sir? So that we can learn, to pick ourselves up.
    From Batman Begins. Submitted by Dan G (13 days ago)
    1. Alfred Pennyworth: With all do respect sir, why bats?
    2. Batman/Bruce Wayne: Bats frighten me. Its time the world share my dread.
    From Batman Begins. Submitted by David N (16 days ago)
    1. Alfred: You are as precious to me as you were to your own mother and father. I sworn to them that I would protect you. But I haven't.
    From The Dark Knight Rises. Submitted by Dylan Y (23 days ago)
    1. Cobb: I need an architect who is as good as I was.
    2. Miles: I got somebody better!
    From Inception. Submitted by Krystoffer Dave L (25 days ago)
    1. Miles: You're here to corrupt one of my brightest and best.
    2. Cobb: You know what I'm offering. You have to let them decide for themselves.
    From Inception. Submitted by Krystoffer Dave L (25 days ago)
    1. Alfred: Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Jack P (33 days ago)
    1. Alfie: You know what? When I look back on my little life and the birds I've known and think of all the things they've done for me and the little I've done for them, you'd think I'd had the best of it all along the line. But what have I got out of it? I've got a bob or two, some decent clothes, a car. I've got my health back and I ain't attached. But I ain't got my peace of mind. And if you ain't got that, you ain't got nothing. I don't know, it seems to me that if they ain't got you one way, they've got you another. So what's the answer? That's what I keep asking myself. What's it all about? Know what I mean?
    From Alfie. Submitted by Andreea T (34 days ago)
    1. Alfie: Why him? Better than me? What's he got that I haven't? Apart from long hair. Well? Come on, let's have it. What's he bleeding got?
    2. Ruby: He's younger than you are.
    From Alfie. Submitted by Andreea T (34 days ago)
    1. Alfie: Make a married woman laugh and you're halfway there with her. It don't work with the single bird. It'd start you off on the wrong foot. You get one of them laughing, you won't get nothing else.
    From Alfie. Submitted by Andreea T (34 days ago)
    1. Cutter: Now you're looking for the secret...But you won't find it bof course, you're not really looking... You don't really want to know..You want to be fooled!
    From The Prestige. Submitted by Chella M (2 months ago)
    1. Batman/Bruce Wayne: The bandit, in the forest in Burma, did you catch him?
    2. Alfred: Yes.
    3. Batman/Bruce Wayne: How?
    4. Alfred: We burned the forest down.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Will J (2 months ago)
    1. Cutter: I once told you about a salior who described drowning to me.
    2. Robert Angier: Yes, he said it was like going home.
    3. Cutter: I was lying. He said it was agony.
    From The Prestige. Submitted by Will J (2 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Some men aren't looking for anything logical, like money. They can't be bought, bullied, reasoned, or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Karim Z (3 months ago)
    1. Batman/Bruce Wayne: You still haven't given up on me..
    2. Alfred Pennyworth: Never!
    From Batman Begins. Submitted by Bradlee W (3 months ago)
    1. Hank: Ok you hold pop it in on the count of three.
    2. Alexander: Okay.
    3. Hank: One. [POP]
    4. Sean: What happened to the two and three?
    5. Alexander: One. Two. Three.
    From Journey 2: The Mysterious Island. Submitted by Kit K (3 months ago)
    1. Batman/Bruce Wayne: That bandit, in the forest at Burma, did you catch him?
    2. Alfred: Yes.
    3. Batman/Bruce Wayne: How?
    4. Alfred: We burnt the forest down.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Andrew C (4 months ago)
    1. Miles: Mr. Cobb has a job offering for you.
    2. Ariadne: What, some kind of work placement?
    3. Cobb: Not exactly.
    From Inception. Submitted by Michael C (4 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Because some men aren't looking for anything logical, like money. They can't be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Pun C (4 months ago)
    1. Victor Melling: Smilers wear a crown, losers wear a frown.
    2. Gracie Hart: I would so love to hurt you right now.
    From Miss Congeniality. Submitted by Nhia T (4 months ago)
    1. Kathy Morningside: New Jersey, as you may know, there are many who consider the Miss United States Pageant to be out dated and... and de-feminist. What would you say to them?
    2. Victor Melling: Oh my God.
    3. Gracie Hart: Well, I would say that I used to be one of them. And then I came here and I realized that, these women are smart, terrific people who are just trying to make a difference in the world. And we've become really good friends. I mean, I know that we secretly wish the other one to trip and fall on her face, but oh, wait a minute, I've already done that! [everyone laughs and applause] And for me, this experience has been one of the most, rewarding and liberating experiences of my life.
    4. Victor Melling: My, God, I did it.
    5. Gracie Hart: And if anyone, anyone, tries to hurt one of my new friends, I would take them out. I would make them suffer so much, that they'd wish they were never born. And if they ran, I would hunt them down. Thank you Kathy. [Stan claps, but everyone mutters amongst themselves]
    6. Victor Melling: A brief shining moment, and then that mouth.
    From Miss Congeniality. Submitted by Nhia T (4 months ago)
    1. Victor Melling: I've never been prouder. Or, of any girls that i have coached, you are truly unique. If i ever had a daughter, I'd imagine that she would be something like you. Which is perhaps why I've never reproduced.
    From Miss Congeniality. Submitted by Nhia T (4 months ago)
    1. Gracie Hart: Excuse me what is your problem?
    2. Victor Melling: Problem?
    3. Gracie Hart: Yeah. I mean 'yes.' I mean have I offended you in some way, because quite frankly you've been completely antagonistic since the second I walked through that door.
    From Miss Congeniality. Submitted by Nhia T (4 months ago)
    1. Victor Melling: Sorry, what was the question? I...I was distracted by the half masticated cow, rolling around in your wide open trap.
    From Miss Congeniality. Submitted by Nhia T (4 months ago)
    1. Alfred: You are as precious to me as you were to your own mother and father. I swore to them that I would protect you, and I haven't!
    From The Dark Knight Rises. Submitted by Chris S (4 months ago)
    1. Alfred: You were as precious to me as your own mother and father. I swore to them I would protect you, and I havent.
    From The Dark Knight Rises. Submitted by Alex E (4 months ago)
    1. Mater: You guys know I'm just a tow truck.
    2. Finn McMissile: [to Holley] It's his cover. [to Mater] Right! And I'm in the import-export business!
    3. Mater: Wait. What?
    From Cars 2. Submitted by Declan R (4 months ago)
    1. Mater: An idiot? Is that how you see me?
    2. Finn McMissile: That's how everyone sees you. That's the genius of it. Nobody realizes they're being fooled because they're too busy laughing AT the fool.
    From Cars 2. Submitted by Vaneay C (5 months ago)
    1. Finn McMissile: Wow! What a way to start the day! Nothing gets you more alive then being so close to death.
    From Cars 2. Submitted by Declan R (5 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Ariel U (5 months ago)
    1. Alfred: You are as precious to me as you were to your own mother and father? I swore to them that I would protect you, and I haven't?
    From The Dark Knight Rises. Submitted by Isuru B (5 months ago)
    1. Alfred: I swore to your parents that I would protect you. And I haven't.
    From The Dark Knight Rises. Submitted by Kyle T (5 months ago)
    1. Alfred: He can be the outcast. He can make the choice that no one else can make. The right coice.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Narendran A (5 months ago)
    1. Nigel Powers: There are only two things I can't stand in this world. People who are intolerant of other people's cultures... and the Dutch.
    From Austin Powers in Goldmember. Submitted by Sanjay R (7 months ago)
    1. Walter: I'm going to go inside and watch television.
    2. Garth McCaan: Ain't got one.
    3. Walter: No television?
    From Secondhand Lions. Submitted by Alyssa B (8 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Perhaps master Wayne this is a man you don't fully understand [explains story of a thief stealing rubies in Burma and just throwing them away]
    2. Batman/Bruce Wayne: So why steal them?
    3. Alfred: Oh well because he thought it was good sport. Because some men arent looking for anything logical like money. They cant be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Jim R (9 months ago)
    1. Miles: It'll take more than the occasional stuffed animal to convince those children they still have a father.
    From Inception. Submitted by Thomas B (9 months ago)
    1. Alfred: It'll be nice when Wayne Manor's rebuilt. Then you can swap not sleeping in a penthouse, for not sleeping in a mansion.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Jacob D (9 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Things were always going to get worse before they got better.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Thilina M (9 months ago)
    1. Freddy Benson: Excuse me. May I go to the bathroom first?
    2. Lawrence Jamieson: Of course you may.
    3. Freddy Benson: [after a pause, and with relief] Thank you.
    From Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. Submitted by George H (9 months ago)
    1. Finn McMissile: You are speed? Then Francesco is TRIPLE speed!
    From Cars 2. Submitted by David L (9 months ago)
    1. Liz Blake: Well, what do you think?
    2. Dr. Robert Elliott: I think you're a very attractive woman.
    3. Liz Blake: Would you like to touch me?
    4. Dr. Robert Elliott: Yes, and no, Yes, because...
    5. Liz Blake: Well, why don't you?
    6. Dr. Robert Elliott: I told you why.
    7. Liz Blake: Oh, that's right. You're a married doctor? I remember now. I think you're full of shit.
    8. Dr. Robert Elliott: You do? Just because I happen to have personal and professional ethics?
    9. Liz Blake: Look, Doc, I think you're kind of shy. So, uh... I'm gonna go powder my nose... and when I come back, I hope to find your clothes right next to mine. And if not, we can just get back to the mind fuck.
    From Dressed to Kill. Submitted by Lucien Z (9 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Because some men aren't looking for anything logical, like money. They can't be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Ismael Q (10 months ago)
    1. Batman/Bruce Wayne: People are dying, Alfred. What would you have me do?
    2. Alfred: Endure, Master Wayne. Take it. They'll hate you for it, but that's the point of Batman, he can be the outcast. He can make the choice that no one else can make. The right choice.
    3. Batman/Bruce Wayne: Well today I found out what Batman can't do. He can't endure this. Today you get to say 'I told you so'.
    4. Alfred: Today, I don't want to.
    5. Alfred: But I did bloody tell you.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by mark r (10 months ago)
    1. Robert Spritzel: Do you know that the harder thing to do and the right thing to do are usually the same thing? Nothing that has meaning is easy. 'Easy' doesn't enter into grown-up life.
    From The Weather Man. Submitted by Alejandro O (10 months ago)
    1. Finn McMissle: These Americans are clearly master spys.
    2. Mater: WHO HAH HOOO HAHH!
    3. Holly Shiftwell: Oh, you've got to be joking.
    From Cars 2. Submitted by Kolin K (11 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Some men aren't looking for anything logical, like money. They can't be bought, bullied,reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Jessica G (11 months ago)
    1. Finn McMissle: Finn McMissile, British intelligence.
    2. Mater: Tow Mater, average intelligence.
    From Cars 2. Submitted by Kenny N (11 months ago)
    1. Finn McMissle: Finn McMissle, British intelligence.
    2. Mater: Tow Mater, average intelligence.
    From Cars 2. Submitted by Brian T (12 months ago)
    1. Alfred: A long time ago, I was in Burma, my friends and I were working for the local government. They were trying to buy the loyalty of tribal leaders by bribing them with precious stones. But their caravans were being raided in a forest north of Rangoon by a bandit. So we went looking for the stones. But in six months, we never found anyone who traded with him. One day I saw a child playing with a ruby the size of a tangerine. The bandit had been throwing them away.
    2. Batman/Bruce Wayne: Then why steal them?
    3. Alfred: Because he thought it was good sport. Because some men aren't looking for anything logical, like money. They can't be bought, bullied, reasoned or negotiated with. Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Rick M (12 months ago)
    1. Charlie Croker: You were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off!
    From The Italian Job. Submitted by Roshan C (12 months ago)
    1. Alfred Pennyworth: Why do we fall, sir? So we can pick ourselves up.
    From Batman Begins. Submitted by Roshan C (12 months ago)
    1. Miles: Mr. Cobb has a job offer he would like to discuss with you.
    2. Ariadne: Like a work placement?
    3. Cobb: Not exactly.
    From Inception. Submitted by Henrique T (12 months ago)
    1. Alfred: Know you limits, Master Wayne.
    2. Batman/Bruce Wayne: Batman has no limits.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Benny B (13 months ago)
    1. Miles: Come back to reality Tom. Please.
    2. Cobb: Those kids, your grandchildren, they're waiting for their father to come back home. That's their reality. And this job, this last job, that's how I get there. I would not be standing here if I knew any other way.
    From Inception. Submitted by Benny B (13 months ago)
    1. Bank Manager: Some men just want to watch the world burn.
    From The Dark Knight. Submitted by Chris S (13 months ago)
    1. D.I. Frampton: It's not Northern Ireland Harry.
    2. Harry Brown: No it's not. Those people were fighting for something; for a cause. To them out there, this is just entertainment.
    From Harry Brown. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Harry Brown: I don't reckon you've got long. Seen that before. Gut wound. The slug's probably torn right through your liver. Mate of mine in Ulster got caught in sniper fire. Bullet blew his inside out. He screamed for a good 10 minutes. We couldn't send a medic in, the section was too hot. So we all took cover... and watched him die. I've never told that... to anyone... you should've called an ambulance... for the girl...
    From Harry Brown. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Dr. Wilbur Larch: Good night, you princes of Maine, you kings of New England.
    From The Cider House Rules. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Cutter: You're a magician, not a wizard.
    From The Prestige. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Cutter: Now you're looking for the secret. But you won't find it because of course, you're not really looking. You don't really want to work it out. You want to be fooled.
    From The Prestige. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Cobb: Reality? Those kids, your grandchildren, they're waiting for their father to come back home. That's their reality. And this job, this last job, that's how I get there. I would not be standing here if I knew any other way. I need an architect who is as good as I was.
    2. Miles: I've got somebody better.
    From Inception. Submitted by Tinashe C (13 months ago)
    1. Cutter: Every great magic trick consists of three parts or acts. The first part is called "The Pledge". The magician shows you something ordinary: a deck of cards, a bird or a man. He shows you this object. Perhaps he asks you to inspect it to see if it is indeed real, unaltered, normal. But of course... it probably isn't. The second act is called "The Turn". The magician takes the ordinary something and makes it do something extraordinary. Now you're looking for the secret... but you won't find it, because of course you're not really looking. You don't really want to know. You want to be fooled. But you wouldn't clap yet. Because making something disappear isn't enough; you have to bring it back. That's why every magic trick has a third act, the hardest part, the part we call "The Prestige"."
    From The Prestige. Submitted by Rajarajan M (13 months ago)
    1. Lord Redbrick: I'm not illiterate! My parents were married!
    From Gnomeo and Juliet. Submitted by rob g (14 months ago)
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