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Topic started by MemoryUnchained on 29 Mar 2008, 14:38:17
MemoryUnchained
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United States
Posts: 442
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29 Mar 2008, 14:38:17
 
Movies With Great Card Game Scenes {from, msnbc.com}
..You say, you don't know how I came across this subject matter{?}
Answer: I 'googled,' 'Movies with card scenes'.. 'D-u-h'{!}
 
By Erik Lundegaard
MSNBC contributor
 
"The Cincinnati Kid" (1965)
We first see the Cincinnati Kid {Steve McQueen} playing against amateurs on the wrong side of the tracks in 1930s New Orleans â014 Hood: "He ainâ019t going to put out $194 on a lousy pair." Kid: "You did." â014 but 11 minutes in, we know where this movie is going. The man, Lancey Howard {a pitch-perfect Edward G. Robinson}, is coming to town and he's going to play the Kid, the local favorite. Everything is build-up to this game. There are two women, of course, the good one {Tuesday Weld} and the bad one {Ann-Margret, the original cause of global warming}, a mentor {Karl Malden} and the rich local boy who wants to see Lancey gutted {Rip Torn}. Breaks in the marathon poker game at the Lafayette Hotel further plot points: the Kid prevents the locals from cheating for him; he finally succumbs to the bad girl. But it's the poker game we want and some shots; I'm thinking of the crowd gathered around the poker table, greenish hues everywhere, are so perfectly set up, so still and beautiful, they look like paintings. Yeah, the final hand is a bit much {a full house and a straight flush?} but this movie can still say to these other films what Lancey says to The Kid: "Youâ019re good, kid. But as long as I'm around youâ019re second best."
 
"Rounders" (1998)
Halfway through, the main charactersâ019 motivations become muddled. Mike {Matt Damon}, torn between his girlfriend {Gretchen Mol} and law school on the one hand, and Worm {Ed Norton} and poker on the other, loses the girl and leaves law school. So what happens? Worm, who wouldn't leave Mike alone for the first half, suddenly leaves him alone, while Mike uses his newfound freedom to... find Worm? Find a poker game? No, he sits around his apartment watching old "World Series of Poker" videos. It feels wrong. And what man turns down a pass from Famke Janssen? Now that really feels wrong. Still, "Rounders" is the one movie that gets poker right, with all its lingo {"I flopped a nut straight"}, strategies {leaving yourself an out} and etiquette {"Donâ019t splash the pot"} intact. Plus you get to hear the most turgid Russian accent in movie history from John Malkovich {"Payy thett mehen hiss muhnny"}. Even better, its lesson is the opposite of most can-do Hollywood lessons: We can't overcome who we are. When Mike asks his legal mentor, Prof. Petrovsky {Martin Landau}, whether he would make the same choice of abandoning religion and family for the law, Petrovsky shrugs and says, "What choice?" It's a movie, as the tagline tells us, about playing the hand you're dealt. There's something paradoxically freeing in this.
 
"Casino Royale" {2006}
The villainous Le Chiffre {Mads Mikkelsen} is a percentage player. "I have two pair," he says to a General, "and you have a 17.4 percent of making a straight." James Bond {Daniel Craig} simply reads people. "In poker, you never play the hand," he says. "You play the man across from you.â01D You could argue that not enough is done with their two different styles of play in the marathon, high-stakes poker game at the Casino Royale in Montenegro. Sure, Bond figures out Le Chiffreâ019s "tell," and is double-crossed with the "false tell," but Le Chiffre's calculations are all silent. Once again, plot points are furthered during the breaks: Bond kills two terrorists with his bare hands; he sits in the shower with Vesper (Eva Green); heâ019s poisoned, dies and is revived. Earlier we see him winning his 1964 Aston Martin in a poker game, splashing the pot, i.e., pushing all his chips in, causing the dealer {who gives him a dirty look} to count them; and in Montenegro he splashes the pot again, and some poker players think this is too unprofessional and thus unrealistic, but that's exactly the point of this Bond. He's a roughneck. He's someone who makes messes other people have to clean up. Oh, and the final hand is once again full house vs. straight flush. Homage to "The Cincinnati Kid"?
 
"California Split" {1974}
Most plot descriptions try to give a sense of cohesiveness to this 1974 Robert Altman film but there really isnâ019t any. Life just unfolds. The film begins in a sad, low-grade gambling establishment where we hear a video explaining, in the flat tone of 1950s educational films, the rules and etiquette of poker playing: sit erect, be quiet, donâ019t gloat. We promptly see the talkative, charismatic Charlie Waters (Elliott Gould) breaking all of these rules. That game ends when a sore loser thinks Charlie and the uptight Bill Denny (George Segal) are somehow in cahoots. Theyâ019re not, but they meet later at a bar and click. Theyâ019re less card sharks than perpetual gamblers. They bet on who can name all seven dwarves. They bet on a boxing match, then on a fight that breaks out in the crowd. Unlike most cautionary tales about gambling (â01COwning Mahoneyâ01D), these guys keep winning. Yeah, Bill loses badly when Charlie cuts out for Tijuana, but when he returns the two head for Reno for a big poker match. After much setup, and unlike all of the above movies, we donâ019t see the game, just the results. Bill wins. And keeps winning. His revelation? All that winning doesnâ019t mean an effinâ019 thing. My revelation after seeing this movie? Iâ019d forgotten how good Elliott Gould was.
 
"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" {1975}
This list was put together to coincide with the opening of "21" and, in honor, I wanted to include a good blackjack movie but there isnâ019t any â014 for obvious reasons. Poker is as much a contest as boxing. Thereâ019s drama there. Blackjack is a childâ019s game in comparison. In â01CHard Eight,â01D professional gambler Sydney (Phillip Baker Hall) says, â01CIf you donâ019t know how to count cards, you oughta stay away from blackjack,â01D and the movies have generally agreed. But for the best blackjack scene? Iâ019ll give it to â01CCuckooâ019s Nest.â01D The movie isnâ019t a card movie but McMurphy (Jack Nicholson) is certainly a card man. His deck is never far from him. Heâ019s playing with it when he first walks into the ward, and at that first group meeting with Nurse Ratched (Louise Fletcher), and when heâ019s talking with the asylum director about â01Cthe rigged game.â01D The blackjack scene works because McMurphy is basically playing a childâ019s game with children. â01CHit me,â01D Martini (Danny DeVito) says. Over and over. â01CYou got 20 showing!â01D McMurphy shouts. â01CItâ019s a (bleeping) Queen here, you understand? You donâ019t count the this and the this!â01D But Martini is insistent. â01CHit me again,â01D he says. â01CI want another card.â01D A great scene in one of our greatest movies.
 
Live Vote
What is your favorite movie that features a card game?
"The Cincinnati Kid" (1965) "Rounders" (1998)
"Casino Royale" (2006) "California Split" (1974)
"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" (1975) "House of Games" (1987)
"The Cooler" (2003) "Ocean's Eleven" (2001)
"Honeymoon in Vegas" (1992) "The Sting" (1973)
"Croupier" (1998) "Born Yesterday" (1950)
"Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels" (1998) "A Big Hand for the Little Lady" (1966)
"Rain Man" (1988) "Atlantic City" (1980)
"The Flamingo Kid" (1984) "Kaleidoscope" (1966)
"The Gambler" (1974) "Cool Hand Luke" (1967)
"Goodfellas" (1990) "Tombstone" (1993)
EELDROP
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United States
Posts: 26
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31 Mar 2008, 12:38:18
 
Re: Movies With Great Card Game Scenes {from, msnbc.com}
actually a good movie that revolved around poker, was "the odd couple". although a better play than a movie,
 
it needs to be mentioned.....