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I Like Money

Original title: Mr. Topaze
  • 1961
  • Approved
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
579
YOUR RATING
I Like Money (1961)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer0:59
2 Videos
48 Photos
ComedyDrama

A poor but proud French teacher gets fired after refusing to modify the grades of a rich student. As this could be the opportunity to exploit his honesty, Castel Benac hires Topaze as a mana... Read allA poor but proud French teacher gets fired after refusing to modify the grades of a rich student. As this could be the opportunity to exploit his honesty, Castel Benac hires Topaze as a managing director for a shady business.A poor but proud French teacher gets fired after refusing to modify the grades of a rich student. As this could be the opportunity to exploit his honesty, Castel Benac hires Topaze as a managing director for a shady business.

  • Director
    • Peter Sellers
  • Writers
    • Marcel Pagnol
    • Pierre Rouve
  • Stars
    • Peter Sellers
    • Nadia Gray
    • Herbert Lom
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    579
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Peter Sellers
    • Writers
      • Marcel Pagnol
      • Pierre Rouve
    • Stars
      • Peter Sellers
      • Nadia Gray
      • Herbert Lom
    • 15User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:59
    Official Trailer
    I Like Money
    Trailer 0:59
    I Like Money
    I Like Money
    Trailer 0:59
    I Like Money

    Photos48

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    Top Cast19

    Edit
    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Auguste Topaze
    Nadia Gray
    Nadia Gray
    • Suzy Courtois
    Herbert Lom
    Herbert Lom
    • Castel Benac
    Leo McKern
    Leo McKern
    • Muche
    Martita Hunt
    Martita Hunt
    • Baroness
    Anne Leon
    • Mrs. Tamise
    John Neville
    John Neville
    • Roger de Bersac
    Billie Whitelaw
    Billie Whitelaw
    • Ernestine
    Michael Gough
    Michael Gough
    • Tamise
    Joan Sims
    Joan Sims
    • Colette
    John Le Mesurier
    John Le Mesurier
    • Blackmailer
    Pauline Shepherd
    • Lilette
    Michael Sellers
    • Gaston
    Mario Fabrizi
    • Surprised gentleman
    • (uncredited)
    Thomas Gallagher
    • Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    Rex Garner
    • Maitre D
    • (uncredited)
    Mark Mileham
    • Pupil performing dictation
    • (uncredited)
    John Miller
    • Butler
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Peter Sellers
    • Writers
      • Marcel Pagnol
      • Pierre Rouve
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.1579
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    Featured reviews

    aramis-112-804880

    He should have directed more, officially

    (Based on a play) Mister Topaze is a poor but honest schoolteacher with an avaricious boss (Leo McKern) and chased by his boss' daughter (a very funny Billie Whitelaw).

    When he loses his job after not changing the grades of a student from a good family Topaze is taken in by a couple of crooks (Herbert Lom, Nadia Gray) who use the honest teacher as a front man for their underhanded schemes.

    After that the teacher goes on a learning curve.

    This is Sellers' sole directoral effort and that's too bad because he has a good eye for framing the wide screen, especially out in Paris and its environs. Sellers is surrounded by talent (including also Michael Gough and John Neville) and he's happy to take on the quiet role anchoring the movie and leave the flamboyance to others (especially Lom, Whitelaw and McKern).

    Unfortunately, the role of Topaze is an actor-killer. The same play was filmed before with the great John Barrymore and he was surprisingly dull. I can't imagine employing that word for Barrymore, nor for Sellers. Yet it is true.

    The thing about Sellers is his amazing ability to be quiet. Watch the first two Clouseau movies or "Being There." Sellers' being both fascinating and hilarious in stillness is a revelation.

    Sellers is also, arguably (or I'd say not so arguably), the best slapstick artist since the Silent era. His subtle strengths (and, yes, his slapstick could be amazingly subtle), especially in the early 1960s, were wonderful. But he gives himself little to do in that direction. He might have thought it a betrayal of the character, but making Topaze a trifle clumsy in the patented Sellers way, working his special magic with inanimate objects so the simplest thing is menacing, would have been a boon to the character, making him at least a tiny bit interesting.

    "Mister Topaze" fails in two areas. First, the lead character is simply uninvolving, even with Sellers playing the part. Second, the ending, while realistic, is too bleak.

    Sellers always pretended there was no he. Actually, if only half the stories about him are true, he probably feared introspection. Mister Topaze (the character) is possibly a reflection of the way he visualized himself: a man who is invisible if he's not playing a part.

    Or is that over-analyzing a movie I find well-directed with a superb cast but which I thought dull? Am I trying to justify finding Peter Sellers (Peter Sellers!) uninvolving?

    This movie is a must for Sellers buffs, but that's as much as I can say for it.

    I liked the song "I Like Money." And I liked Sellers' direction. But if I find the movie sad it's more because it's such a beautiful failure.
    6ferguson-6

    after almost 60 years

    Greetings again from the darkness. This is the only feature film to have Peter Sellers credited as a director, and it was released in 1961. Retitled "I Like Money" for its United States release, it seems that regardless of the title or continent, the film can only be labeled a box office flop and disappointment to viewers and critics alike. Considered "long lost" and unseen for decades, the only surviving 35mm print has been restored by the British Film Institute, so that new generations can be disappointed ... or perhaps appreciate it from a 'history of cinema' perspective (which I certainly do).

    Peter Sellers directs himself, as he stars as Albert Topaze, a provincial schoolteacher of the highest integrity. We get a good feel for Topaze in the scenes playing under the opening credits. He's a dedicated teacher, but not one the students respect. Topaze has a crush on fellow teacher Ernestine (played beautifully by Billie Whitelaw, whom you'll recall as the nanny in THE OMEN, 1976). The obstacle here is that Ernestine is the daughter of the bellowing Headmaster Muche (Leo McKern, A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS, 1966), Topaze's demanding boss. Topaze's loyal friend and landlord is Tamise (Michael Gough, BATMAN, 1989), another fellow teacher.

    Topaze is a timid fellow, though of the highest moral principles. When the Baroness (fiery Martita Hunt) flashes what today we would call entitlement by demanding Topaze change her grandson's grade or be fired, Topaze finds himself out of work. It's here where scheming Suzy (Nadia Gray, forever a part of cinematic lore thanks to her unforgettable cameo in LA DOLCE VITA, 1960) and Castel Benac (Herbert Lom, Sellers' memorable co-star in the "Pink Panther" franchise and THE LADYKILLERS, 1955), entice Topaze into their shady business ... hoping to fend off legal inquiries given the reputation for honesty Topaze brings to the enterprise.

    Can money corrupt even the most upstanding character? The story comes from renowned French writer Marcel Pagnol and his 1933 play with Raymond Massey in the lead. Pagnol also wrote the novels "Jean De Florette" and "Manon of the Spring", the sources of two excellent films from director Claude Berri. There have been at least three other film versions of 'Topaze', two 1933 projects including one starring John Barrymore and directed by Harry d'Abbadie d'Arrast, and a 1951 version directed by Pagnol himself with Fernandel in the lead.

    Mr. Sellers is in fine form here, and in the first half he displays some of the physical comedic traits that defined his Inspector Jacques Couseau in the 'Pink Panther' series a couple of years later, and this film was released three years prior to the all-time classic DR. STRANGELOVE OR: HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB. It seems the real issue with the movie, and why it was so poorly received, is that Sellers plays such a challenging character. Initially Topaze is a sympathetic, likable man and he transitions to one we have little interest in - one to whom viewers simply can't relate.

    Still, despite the obstacles within the story, it's fascinating to go back almost 60 years and discover a previously unseen Sellers project that features not just the stellar cast listed above, but also John Neville (THE ADVENTURES OF BARON MUNCHAUSEN or for fans of "The X-Files", he known as "the well-manicured man"), British film veteran John Le Mesurier as a blackmailer, and the only film acting gig for Michael Sellers, the son of Peter (he plays young Gaston).

    Nadia Gray sizzles in singing "I Like Money", a song written by Herbert Kretzmer, and Herbert Lom gets an instant classic line, "He's an idiot. I like him." Is this a comedy? Certainly the first 20 minutes bring laughs, but by the end, those laughs seem quite distant. Watching a man lose his soul and his friends is painful. Can money buy happiness? Topaze has his answer, but as viewers we aren't so sure he's correct.
    7christopher-underwood

    Clearly the BFI had a copy stashed away

    This obscure Peter Sellers film directed by himself begins poorly. We are introduced to the self righteous small town schoolteacher, played by Sellers, and it seems to go on and on without being amusing, or if occasionally vaguely amusing, certainly not funny. An amazingly young Billie Whitelaw doesn't help, seeming unable to rid herself of her theatrical bent. And here perhaps lies the basic problem in that this was a stage play and much of the activity would have probably been acceptable on the stage whereas it probably needed someone with greater experience than Sellers to shake this up and give it more life. As it happens things are never as bad as at the start and gradually things get less bad. By the very end we have a gloriously presented Sellers in complete cynic mode ready to go and it ends. Masses of extras n the Blu-ray and the prospect of seeing it again without fear of it sinking into the mire make me look back just a little more favourably and feel a bit sorry for Sellers who apparently felt so bad at the films reception that he thought he had bought up all copies and destroyed them. Clearly the BFI had a copy stashed away.
    10scottjames-39567

    A joy to watch

    This is truly a very interesting film. It's not a masterpiece, but it's worth watching this film if you like Peter Sellers.
    4brogmiller

    A 'lost' film? Unfortunately, no.

    This is the fourth film version of Marcel Pagnol's play, the third of which was directed by Pagnol himself and here Peter Sellers as the title character is following in the footsteps of luminaries Louis Jouvet, John Barrymore and Fernandel. This would be a daunting enough task for the best of actors but Mr. Sellers alas does not fall into that category. He has furthermore made a rod for his own back by attempting to direct the piece. A handful of actor/directors have managed to pull off the double but he is certainly not one of them.

    He has to his credit cast the film well, notably Herbert Lom, Nadia Gray and John Neville and the film perks up a little when they appear. Georges van Parys' idiomatic score is a delight whilst the excellent art direction is by Peter Murton, best known for his work on the Bond films.

    The film is weakened however by the confounded Cinemascope format, plodding direction, dire pacing and one would have to say, Seller's performance. We are again witnessing brilliant mimicry with utter emptiness behind it although those who consider Sellers a great actor will no doubt consider this view to be heretical.

    One critic has suggested that Sellers' sole directorial effort is in need of reappraisal.... No sir, it is not!

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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Peter Sellers was believed to have had all copies of this film taken out of public domain and destroyed. This was untrue, fortunately, although it was, for many years, extremely difficult to find prints of the film, even very degraded ones in which the color had all but vanished. Well over half a century after it was made, a restored version of the film appeared on DVD.
    • Quotes

      Castel Benac: [an aside about Topaze] This man is an idiot. I like him.

    • Connections
      Featured in Discovering Film: Peter Sellers (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      I Like Money
      Music by George Martin

      Lyrics by Herbert Kretzmer

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1962 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mr. Topaze
    • Filming locations
      • MGM British Studios, Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Dimitri De Grunwald Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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