November 14, 2009
Caine was outcast by his childhood friends

Sir Michael Caine and David Haye at The UK premiere of 'Harry Brown' held at the Odeon Leicester Square. (WENN.com)

Sir Michael Caine was outcast by his childhood friends - because he was so broke he couldn't even buy his pals a drink in the pub.

The ‘Get Carter’ star recently confessed he joined a gang in his youth, before finding fame in a string of acclaimed British films in the 1960s.

But the star lost touch with his boyhood friends as he struggled to make it in the movies - because he was too broke to socialize.

He says, "It also gives you a tremendous sense of guilt for those you've left behind, because you shouldn't have left them so far behind. Not everyone's going to be a multi-millionaire movie star, but at least they can get a decent job, and make a decent living and lead a happy life. That's the minimum.

"But some of them never got the chance... I was a broke, out-of-work actor, and I didn't have enough money to buy a round in the pub. So they stopped seeing me. Broke, out-of-work actors are very lonely people. It's the opposite of what you imagine: they blew me out first." (KD/WNTMA/ZN)