The story of a Jewish front man for the Las Vegas Mob and his wife who jinxes the operation. Based on the real-life story of Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal and Tony 'The Ant' Spilotro. Read more
| Starring | Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci, Don Rickles |
|---|---|
| Director | Martin Scorsese |
| Genres | Drama |
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The story of a Jewish front man for the Las Vegas Mob and his wife who jinxes the operation. Based on the real-life story of Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal and Tony 'The Ant' Spilotro.
| Starring | Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci, Don Rickles, Alan King, Kevin Pollak, James Woods |
|---|---|
| Director | Martin Scorsese |
| Studio | UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 57 mins Blu-ray: 2 hrs 58 mins HD DVD: 2 hrs 58 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English Blu-ray: English HD DVD: English |
| Dubbed | Hungarian |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Subtitles | DVD: Danish, Finnish, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Norwegian, Swedish |
| Released | DVD: 15 Jul 2002 Blu-ray: 24 Nov 2008 HD DVD: 29 Oct 2007 Production year: 1995 |
| Format | DVD |
Or you can rent each disc individually:
It's Goodfellas goes to Las Vegas as director Martin Scorsese returns to the mean streets of urban America, with which he is so familiar, for Casino, a hugely under-rated and shocking tale of power, money and depravity, set in a city where you can bet on everything and all dreams are sold for cash. Scorsese's disturbing film is basically about the Mafia adrift in the 1970s without its warped code of moral and family values to keep it in check. Robert De Niro plays Sam Ace Rothstein, a master bookie turned big-shot casino manager whose head for business deserts him when he marries ex-hooker Ginger McKenna (Sharon Stone). But it's when Nicky Santoro (Joe Pesci), Ace's boyhood acquaintance, arrives in town with an ambitious agenda of his own that things take a further downward spiral. Written by Nicholas Pileggi, an Oscar nominee for Goodfellas, Casino goes for absorbing realism, intriguing subplots and expertly drawn characters Stone is an absolute revelation in her demanding role who are even less endearing than their counterparts in Goodfellas, making for a more even portrayal of organised crime. Some of the scenes are squirmingly unpleasant in Scorsese's trademark way: a victim's head being squeezed in a vice is one of the more extreme examples of the graphic brutality that's on display in this unflagging and compelling study of how the mobsters drowned in the sleaze of their own making.
Deft, involving and intriguing depiction of the inescapable corruption of the spirit, in a city built on greed. It begins in a leisurely, documentary style before focusing on individuals as flawed as the system they operate and as expendable as the chips
Las Vegas has never looked more beautiful or more seductive as we are lead through more than a decade of the rise and fall of the mafia empire in the desert. This is not a sanitisation. There is extreme violence. But even that is unforgettably staged and photographed.
It is a long film, nearly 3 hours, but it never slackens its grip for a moment. This is all the more extraordinary an achievement, given that there's so much story it is crammed into voiceover, or rather two strands of variably reliable voiceover.
Sharon Stone won an Oscar for her portrayal of Ginger, the casino boss's wife and sometime hooker, but there's not a bad performance in it. Every character, though at best venial, is so sharply realised you care about them.
In my book this exceeds The Godfather.
From the opening montage of Casino - a visual onslaught of cinematic pyrotechnics from one of America's modern cinematic masters - it is clear that we are in for a gloriously bumpy ride. The opening titles (by the legendary Saul Bass of Vertigo fame), in which De Niro's character is seen hurtling through space, sets the lavish scene for a movie full of shysters, criminals and thugs to come. And yet, after the first thirty minutes of whiplash camera moves, stylised violence and slick but unlikely dialogue, you soon begin to wonder where's the beef? Scorcese must have been thinking the same thing, as it is about then that he starts to unwind the apparent heart of the movie, in the form of the relationship that develops (slightly) between De Niro and Sharon Stone's characters. However much that he plugs away at it though, this love story - set deliberately against the corrupting effects of a life of greed and corruption - never really produces a spark that burns even remotely like love. The beauty and craft of Casino lays instead in the set-piece violence, including the infamous 'head in vice' scene and the brutal (but convincing) scene in which Joe Pesci and his brother 'buy it' in the desert. These moments are tough to watch and seem excessive perhaps and yet within them lays the truth of what the Las Vegas mob (or Las Vegas itself) really was - a bunch of thugs looking for luck in the desert and who both showed nor received any mercy when it came time to pay the house. There is truth and beauty in this most exciting of movies, even if it is too heavily dependent upon the visual element at the expense of the characters. De Niro is however, at times, both haunting and sublime (maybe for the last time ever in his career?). The final shot of his character, looking out from the melancholy and jaded perch of his retirement, conjures up images of his enigmatic smile at the close of 'Once Upon a Time in America' - a comparison that points further to the status of Casino as a flawed but nevertheless essential modern American epic. By the way, I meant to give this film four stars, not five.
24 star Mary Lynn Rajskub added to Saturday's (01Aug09) celebrity weddings by exchanging vows with fiance Matthew Rolph in Las Vegas. The couple married at the Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino, with their one-year-old son Valentine among the intimate wedding party. Rajskub wore an ivory wedding gown designed by Nicole Miller, according to People.com. She says, "Our wedding was beautiful, spontaneous and intimate... We are so excited to officially be husband and wife." The newlyweds share a... Read more