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Casino (1995)
In Martin Scorsese's mob film based on Nicholas Pileggi's
non-fiction novel:
- the opening pre-Saul Bass' credits sequence (his last work
before he passed away) in which Jewish gambler Sam 'Ace' Rothstein
(Robert De Niro) walked out of a casino and entered his parked
car - and the slow-motion car explosion to Johann Sebastian Bach's Passion
According to St. Matthew
- the smooth sequence showing how everyone was watching
everyone else: ("In Vegas, everybody's got to watch everybody
else") in the casino from the players to the dealers, to the
boxmen, to the floormen, to the pit bosses, to the shift bosses,
to the casino manager, to the security camera ("the eye in the
sky")
- the introduction of sexy prostitute/hustler Ginger
McKenna (Sharon Stone) at a roulette table and Ace's first look at
her by spying through the security camera
- the quiet, faithful hang-dog character of Ace's right-hand
man Billy Sherbert (Don Rickles in a serious role)
- the scene of violent mob enforcer "Nicky" Santoro
(Joe Pesci) verbally threatening, intimidating, and denouncing banker
Charlie Clark (Richard Riehle) - demanding to get his money back:
"I think that you've gotten the wrong impression about me. I think
in all fairness, I should explain to you exactly what it is that I
do. For instance, tomorrow morning, I'll get up nice and early, take
a walk down over to the bank, walk in and see and uh, if you don't
have my money for me, I'll crack your f--kin' head wide-open in front
of everybody in the bank. And just about the time that I'm comin' out
of jail, hopefully, you'll be comin' out of your coma. And guess
what? I'll split your f--kin' head open again. 'Cause I'm f--kin' stupid.
I don't give a f--k about jail. That's my business. That's what I do.
And we know what you do, don't we, Charlie? You f--k people out of
money and get away with it."
- the disintegrating relationship between Ace and violent
mob hit-man/enforcer "Nicky" Santoro (Joe Pesci) including
their tense desert scene: ("Normally, my prospects of comin'
back alive from a meeting with Nicky were ninety-nine out of a hundred.
But this time, when I heard him say, 'A couple a hundred yards down
the road', I gave myself fifty-fifty")
Violent Sequences
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Head-Crushing
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Murder of Nicky and Brother Dominick
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- the film's four very memorable violent sequences:
- the scene in which a scam artist running a blackjack racket was
tortured
- the eye-popping scene in which the head of rival mob tough Tony
Dogs (Carl Ciarfalio) was crushed in a vise during torture
- the scene of Nicky and his brother Dominick (Philip Suriano) beaten
up with metal baseball bats and then buried alive by Frank Marino
(Frank Vincent)
- and the rub-outs to silence potential witnesses (when the mob leaders
were arraigned) including the loyal Andy Stone (Alan King, also in
a serious role)
- also, Ace and Ginger's disintegrating marriage, especially
when a jealous Ace had her pimp ex-boyfriend Lester Diamond (James
Woods) beaten up
- Ace's final eulogy for Las Vegas casino life: ("The
town will never be the same...Today, it looks like Disneyland")
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Slow-Motion Explosion During Title Credits
First Look at Ginger
(Sharon Stone)
"Nicky" Intimidating Banker
Ace's Eulogy for Las Vegas
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