There’s a classic MacGuffin in here somewhere, but I can’t make out if it’s the heist serving the satire on movies or the satire on movies serving the heist. Whatever, this is about the funniest picture you’ll watch on the movie business (much better than Paris When It Sizzles two years earlier). You can keep your royalty and your top politicians dropping in from every corner of the globe, but it’s hard to beat Hollywood landing on your doorstep to transform everyone into a sycophant. To facilitate filming, individual streets and solid blocks will be closed and even businessmen whose businesses are threatened will stick their nose out into the road in the hope of being captured by a stray camera. Everyone wants to be in the movies and how brazenly the movies exploit such naked need.
Before we get to the movie part of the story, we find imprisoned top criminal Aldo Vanucci aka “The Fox” (Peter Sellers) escaping from confinement so that he can assist robber Okra (Akim Tamiroff) transport 300 solid gold bars from a heist in Cairo to Italy. Though the heist is deceptively simple (and might even have influenced The Italian Job, 1969), for a time it looks as if this will canter along going nowhere fast while we get bogged down in a subplot concerning the burgeoning acting career of Vanucci’s sister Gina (Britt Ekland). There’s a whole bunch of standard Italian comedy tropes – the dominant Mama, the incompetent crooks and the brother too controlling of his sister.

But once Vanucci hits on a movie shoot as the ideal way to disguise the bringing ashore of the loot into the Italian island of Ischia, he strikes pure comedy gold. The townspeople who might otherwise easily see through a con man are putty in his hands. The local cop comes onside when persuaded he has the cheekbones of actor. Aging vain star Tony Powell (Victor Mature) wearing a trademark trench coat like a latter-day Bogart is an easy catch once you play upon his vanity and even hard-nosed agent Harry (Martin Balsam) is no match for the smooth-talking Vanucci.
Vanucci has mastered the lingo of the film director and can out-lingo everyone in sight. The very idea that he has a hotline to Sophia Loren goes undisputed and Powell is even persuaded that Gina, who has never acted in her life, is the next big thing.
Pick of the marvelous set-pieces is the scene in a restaurant where Vanucci is astonished to find a peach of a girl (Maria Grazia Buccella) speaking in a deep male voice because while she’s opening her mouth the words are being supplied by Okra seated behind her. Not all the best scenes involve Vanucci. Harry tartly batting away Tony’s vanities is priceless while the theft of film equipment while a film director (played by the movie’s director) calls for more dust in a sandstorm is great fun.

Also targeted is the self-indulgence of the arthouse filmmaker determined to add meaning to any picture. Vanucci’s versions of such tropes as lack of communication or a man searching for identity and running away from himself are a joy to behold and one scene of Tony and Gina sitting at opposite ends of a long table at the seashore just about sums the kind of pointless but picturesque sequence likely to be acclaimed in an arthouse “gem.” And you might jump forward to villagers hiding the wine in The Secret of Santa Vittorio (1969) for the sequence where townspeople load up gold into a van, singing jauntily all the time.
Most of all Sellers (A Shot in the Dark, 1964) hits the mark without a pratfall in sight – the only pratfall in the picture is accorded Harry. Unlike The Pink Panther, Sellers doesn’t have to improvise or be funny. He just follows the script and stays true to his character and the one he has just invented of slick director. There’s even a great sting in the tail.
Sellers shows what he can do with drama that skews towards comedy. Though criticized at the time for, effectively, some kind of cultural appropriation – she was a Swede playing an Italian, what a crime! – Britt Ekland (Stiletto, 1969) is perfectly acceptable. Victor Mature (Hannibal, 1960) has a ball sending up the business as do Akim Tamiroff (The Vulture, 1966) and Martin Balsam (The Anderson Tapes, 1971).
Vittorio De Sica (A Place for Lovers, 1969) does pretty well to merge standard Italian broad comedy with several dashes of satire. The big surprise is that Neil Simon (Barefoot in the Park, 1967) wrote the script, helped out by De Sica’s regular collaborator Cesare Zavattini (A Place for Lovers).
I saw this and A Shot in the Dark on successive nights on Amazon Prime. I hadn’t seen either before. They had been received at either ends of the box office spectrum, the Clouseau reprise a big hit, the Hollywood satire a big flop, so I expected my response might reflect that. But, in reality, it was the other way round. I appreciated this one more.
Go figure.
A few items for you:
The 25 Oct 1964 NYT announced After the Fox as the initial project for Brookfield Films, Ltd., owned by comic actor Peter Sellers and producer John Bryan. First-time screenwriter Neil Simon recommended Italian director Vittorio De Sica to helm the picture. The 7 Apr 1965 DV noted that Simon was collaborating with De Sica and Cesare Zavattini on the screenplay. A nine-week shooting schedule was planned for Rome, Italy, with an additional three weeks in Ischia, Italy. United Artists Corporation (UA) agreed to distribute the film. The 13 May 1965 DV revealed that UA was also affiliated with Tale of the Fox, another production scheduled to shoot in Italy. To avoid confusion between the two pictures, the latter was re-titled The Honey Pot (1967, see entry).
A news item in the 2 Dec 1964 DV noted that actor Peter Falk might join the cast. The 21 May 1965 LAT revealed that first-time actress Lydia Brazzi, the wife of Rossano Brazzi, would appear as the title character’s mother. The character’s sister was played by Britt Ekland, Sellers’s current wife. According to the 12 Aug 1965 LAT, cast member Akim Tamiroff was required to shuttle between locations in Italy and France during production, as he was in the process of completing his role in Hotel Paradiso (1966, see entry). Principal photography began 24 May 1965, as stated in a 28 May 1965 DV production chart.
Veteran actor Victor Mature told the 7 Dec 1966 LAT that he interrupted his retirement to play aging movie star “Tony Powell” at the invitation of Sellers. Mature claimed that he demonstrated his dissatisfaction with Neil Simon’s screenplay by throwing it into the Mediterranean Sea. A reconciliation was reached following a second attempt to dispose of the script and a heated exchange with De Sica. Mature admitted that he patterned his characterization on the director, with elements of filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille, “plus a lot of egotism.”
The 21 Jul 1965 DV reported that Sellers returned to London, England, during a one-week hiatus from filming, during which the crew relocated to Ischia. The actor spent part of his vacation recording a version of the Beatles’ “A Hard Day’s Night” while parodying the voice of Sir Laurence Olivier. On 29 Nov 1965, LAT announced Mature’s return from Italy, indicating the end of production. UA informed the 23 Sep 1965 DV of its goal of scheduling a commercial screening before the end of the year, hoping to qualify the film for Academy Award consideration.
Three months later, the 28 Feb 1966 DV stated that composer Burt Bacharach was in London recording the score. The 23 Jun 1966 issue anticipated the completion of post-production by the end of the following month.
An item in the 18 Nov 1966 DV revealed UA’s attempt at publicizing the film by releasing a news story about the fictional production, Gold of Cairo, by Italian director “Federico Fabrizi,” a character played by Sellers.
After the Fox opened 16 Dec 1966 in Los Angeles, CA, and 23 Dec 1966 in New York City. Despite mixed reviews, the film earned $2,296,970 in rental fees, according to the 3 Jan 1968 Var.
The 30 Dec 1966 DV reported that the picture may have inspired a robbery during its run at New York City’s Astor Theatre. After an armed thief posing as a “laundryman” robbed the theater of $1,300, manager John Schneiderman admitted that he should have paid more attention to his advertisement, “Guard your gold-The Fox is on the loose.”
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Brilliant stuff. Thanks.
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Brian, I really enjoyed reading your wonderful write-up of AFTER THE FOX(filmed 1965, released 1966). This movie is one of my favorite comedy movies. I first viewed it on TV’s the NBC SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES in 1970. I get a kick out of Victor Mature spoofing himself and laying on the ham to boot. Peter Sellers is brilliantly hilarious. Story and screenplay by Neil Simon along with Cesare Zavattini is a skewering sendup of movie stars, directors, critics, and audiences.
The music by Burt Bacharach is memorable especially the title song by Bacharach and Hal David sang by the Hollies and Peter Sellers over an animated main title by Dick Horn, which I think is a gem.
There is a cameo by director Vittorio De Sica in the film-within-a-film that looks like a desert peplum film, which also has a wigged and bearded star that looks like James Coburn as John Huston. Is it a makeup heavily Coburn or an Italian look alike?
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Glad you enjoyed it. Not sure about the James Coburn connection. He’s not on the cast list.
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