Michael Caine’s underrated role of playing Jack Carter in Get Carter is one of his best performances, but Jack Carter is not the only character he played in the story. In the 1971 version of Get Carter, which was directed by Mike Hodges, Caine plays the movie’s lead, a gritty English gangster. However, almost 30 years later, the movie was remade by Sylvester Stallone and Caine was cast in a more minor role, with Stallone playing the lead instead.
The original Get Carter is one of a handful of perfect gangster movies, and demonstrates Michael Caine’s incredible talent. The later remake had significant differences and was met with some criticism, but it is still considered one of Sylvester Stallone’s more underrated movies. Both versions follow Jack as he searches for the murderer of his brother. While the remake is not one of Michael Caine’s best movies, his performance in the original film inspired Stallone’s casting choice for Caine in the 2000 version.
Michael Caine Played Cliff Brumby In Sylvester Stallone’s Remake Of Get Carter
Cliff Brumby Is A Minor But Significant Character
While Caine did not play the lead in the 2000 remake of Get Carter, he still played a significant character. Caine played Cliff Brumby, a local loan shark who gives Jack valuable information regarding the death of Jack’s brother, Richie. Cliff is also the owner of Richie’s nightclub, which makes him an important character in Jack’s story due to his professional relationship with Richie. Cliff is one of Jack’s first leads into the death of his brother, and the scene where the two characters exchange information happens early in the movie.
Although Caine has limited screen time in
Get Carter
(2000), his presence pays homage to his major role in the original
Get Carter
from several decades earlier.
Although Caine has limited screen time in Get Carter (2000), his presence pays homage to his major role in the original Get Carter from several decades earlier. His appearance is also amusing given the significance of his role in Get Carter (1971). While he had already reached stardom by the time the original gangster flick was released because of his performances in The Ipcress File and The Italian Job in the 1960s, Get Carter solidified Caine’s reputation, since Jack Carter was unlike any character he had played before.
How Sylvester Stallone’s Get Carter Compared To The 1971 Michael Caine Movie
Get Carter (2000) Follows The Same Story But Focuses on Different Aspects
Get Carter (2000) is arguably more muted than Get Carter (1971). While Stallone’s version still shows the deadly nature of Jack Carter as he stops at nothing to avenge his brother, there are fewer gruesome scenes overall. In comparison, the original Get Carter features several bloody and violent scenes in a justifiably R-rated movie, particularly in the latter half. Caine’s version of Carter is also consistently harsher, and he goes to further extremes to find out the truth about what happened to his brother.
Another difference is that Stallone’s Get Carter follows the trends of action movies in the 2000s where violence is expected and written almost as an afterthought to further the plot. In the original, the violence seems to be a direct result of Carter, who is grittier and more dangerous than Stallone’s version. The tonal shift between the two movies can be explained by the fact that the two versions were filmed in very different eras, as well as the stylistic choices of the filmmakers.
Get Carter (2000) Was Not The First Time Sylvester Stallone And Michael Caine Worked Together
Stallone And Caine Both Appeared In An Iconic War Movie
The first time Michael Caine and Sylvester Stallone appeared on-screen together was in the 1981 classic, Escape to Victory. The movie follows prisoners of war in a German camp as they agree to play a soccer match against German players. The Germans plan to use the game as a propaganda stunt for Germany, while the prisoners plan to use it as a means to escape the prison camp. Caine plays the soccer captain, John Colby, who leads the Allied team, and Stallone plays Robert Hatch, who is instrumental in the prisoners’ escape. The movie started the actors’ long friendship.
Both
Get Carter
(1971) and
Get Carter
(2000) are based on the novel
Jack’s Return Home
by Ted Lewis.
Although Caine already had a major role in the first Get Carter, it’s possible his relationship with Stallone – established during Escape to Victory – was a factor in his role in the remake. The two movies are vastly different, but both Get Carter (2000) and Escape to Victory show off the actors’ working chemistry and highlight their incredible acting abilities. There is no doubt that Caine’s appearance in Stallone’s Get Carter benefited from his relationship with Stallone, in addition to his appearance in the original movie.