2 posts categorized "Games"

March 05, 2012

THE CINCINNATI KID

   Groupthink doesn't live here, critical thought does.

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ColeSmithey.comThis cinematic treatment of Richard Jessup’s novel, about an up-and-coming ’30s poker champ, benefited from screenwriting contributions by Ring Lardner Jr. ("M*A*S*H") and Terry Southern ("Easy Rider").

However, it’s the film’s stellar cast, along with a gritty narrative and stylized direction, that makes The Cincinnati Kid the best poker movie ever. Hotshot poker player Eric Stoner, a.k.a. “The Kid” (unforgettably played by Steve McQueen), goes up against old-guard poker master Lancey Howard, a.k.a. “The Man” (Edward G. Robinson), in a marathon game of five-card stud that will decide if The Man will be replaced.

Roguish Rip Torn plays Slade, a spiteful local tycoon with a vested interest in seeing Howard beaten after being “gutted” in a poker game by The Man.

The film’s characters are clearly defined by their actions leading up to the final poker scene so that we comprehend Stoner and Howard as serious poker competitors who view money as a tool to poker as “language is to thought.”

When the final hand is played, Stoner has cleverly quelled Slade’s attempt to fix the game in his favor with a cheating dealer (Karl Malden), and has worn Howard down in spite of The Man’s various attempts to psyche him out. McQueen and Robinson exhibit perfect poker-faced control in the scene as they each go “all in” with the makings of a full house against a straight flush.

Casinos and poker scenes have been widely used in films from around the world, from Bollywood poker videos to independent films, to documentaries and Hollywood blockbusters. The big poker lesson here is that “sometimes the cards fuck you.” Neither Hollywood nor poker gets any truer than that.

Not Rated. 102 mins.

5 Stars ColeSmithey.com

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January 02, 2009

THE COOLER

Welcome!

Groupthink doesn't live here, critical thought does.ColeSmithey.comThis ad-free website is dedicated to Agnès Varda and to Luis Buñuel.

Get cool rewards when you click on the button to pledge your support through Patreon.

Thanks a lot acorns!

Your kind generosity keeps the reviews coming!

ColeSmithey.com

 

 

ColeSmithey.comNobody plays a loser like William H. Macy. His character Bernie's contagious bad luck finds him employed at a Las Vegas casino by a violence-prone Las Vegas mobster Shelly (hilariously played by Alec Baldwin).

Bernie's mere presence puts the breaks of the winning streaks of gamblers getting hot as Baldwin's casino "The Golden Shangri La." 

During Bernie's final days of working off his debt to Shelly, Bernie discovers true love with a cocktail waitress (played for keeps by the ever-terrific Maria Bello).

ColeSmithey.com

Romance has the unintended effect of causing Bernie to lose his neutralizing affect on gamblers. 

ColeSmithey.com

An explicit sex scene between Bello and Macy was cut from the film to avoid an NC-17 rating but has since been replaced to good overall effect for the movie. Wayne Kramer's feature debut is is a complex low-budget movie that packs a big punch.

Rated R. 103 mins.

4 Stars

Cozy Cole

ColeSmithey.com

 

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