idontfeardeath Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 I was talking with a guy in the pub the other day it got round to poker and we had previously spoke about films so i mentioned rounders, he said its a good film but ___________ is better. I cant remember the blank. So could people list some of their favourite poker films with the main one i've seen being Rounders. And as for the '/Songs'? I just felt than when mentioning media/poker together rambling gambling willie deserved a special mention! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Valiant23 Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs he said its a good film but ___________ is better. I think he's right. :ok ____________ (nothing) is better than Rounders as poker films go. :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ubermonkey1 Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs yeah love rounders, really good film. casino royal was ok apart from the ridiculous last hand:lol cant think of many other good poker films really,supposedly there are a few round the corner tho. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveO Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs Watch Big Deal a series that was shown on BBC1 during the eighties. I watched it recently and I enjoyed just as much as when I was a kid. A classic series aboutr a compuslive gambler. I liked rounders but it is very overrated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveO Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs I think the blank must be Cincinatti Kid starring Steve McQueen. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ubermonkey1 Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs wow, robbie box i remember that:) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveO Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs You got it uber. If you haven't seen it recently I suggest you have a gander. Just noticed you're the same age as me we must have been about 8 or 9 when this first aired. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ubermonkey1 Posted August 12, 2008 Share Posted August 12, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs yeah used to be the last thing i watched before bed usually. think it used to be on at about 8-9ish i seem to remember , it was a bit of a treat for me to stay up that late:) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
daveygh Posted August 13, 2008 Share Posted August 13, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs found this on poker films 1) California Split (1974). Though dated, this is the only movie to ever attempt to show the day to day life of card-playing, sports-betting, sleep-till-noon gamblers. Marred only by a poor ending and muddled sound, Split was directed by Robert Altman (M*A*S*H, Nashville). George Segal & Elliot Gould play Gardena poker players in search of a rush. World Series of Poker champion Amarillo Slim has a featured role. 2) The Sting (1973). When you play a cheater, be sure you cheat better than he does. Paul Newman out-hustles Robert Shaw during a train-board poker game. Newman's boozy, needling performance -- and the shocked expression on Shaw's underling's face when he realizes they've been out-cheated -- reveal a glimpse of how below the polite veneer, poker is usually taken very seriously. 3) The Cincinnati Kid (1965). The finale to the most famous poker movie is so ludicrous it unfortunately damages the whole film. The Kid bungles the hand like a blithering idiot. Still, a movie with Ann-Margret, Steve McQueen and the line "That's what it's all about, doing the wrong thing at the right time" is worth seeing. 4) Kaleidoscope (1966). An obscure, pre-Bonnie and Clyde Warren Beatty film, Beatty breaks into a factory and doctors the plates that print the cards used by the major casinos of the world. He marks the cards in a way only he can see. Naturally, after these cards go into circulation, Beatty goes on the rush to end all rushes playing blackjack and poker. Unfortunately for him, when forced into a head-up no-limit game, they switch cards to ones he can't read. Now forced to play using only his wits, he traps his opponent into an enormous pot -- only to be faced with the best poker decision I've seen in a movie. Check it out. 5) Born Yesterday (1950). Gin is the game. Judy Holliday plays the ultimate dumb blonde while Broderick Crawford is the coarse man who "keeps" her. Watch Holliday play, and you will forever have a new view on "table image." Fine film, great scene. The tepid 1993 remake with Melanie Griffith and Don Johnson features a much weaker gin scene. 6) A Big Hand for the Little Lady (1966). If you swallow the fact that a player can walk across the street carrying her cards in the middle of a hand, you should enjoy this movie with Henry Fonda, Joanne Woodward and a roster of fine character actors. The action centers around a poker game climaxing with "a big hand for the little lady." 7) Three Godfathers (1936). Several film versions of this story exist. The best is the 1948 version with John Wayne, but in this version, after Walter Brennan helps a complete stranger cheat at poker, the stranger asks, "Why did you do that?" Brennan replies: "I dunno. I guess I'm just a no good rat." 8) Dr. Mabuse - The Gambler (1922). Imagine how much you could make if you could use mind control to force an opponent to stand pat on three(!) in blackjack or baccarat, and fold a winning hand in poker. Arch-criminal/lunatic Dr. Mabuse can do exactly that. Directed by Fritz Lang, Dr. Mabuse is perhaps the third best silent, foreign film -- after Lang's own Metropolis and Sergei Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin. Lang and others made several interesting sequels over the next four decades, but none featured cards or gambling so prominently. One line: "A dream of youthful ambition, to win at cards and love." Then there is this question asked upon entering a private club: "cards or cocaine?"!! 9) Run (1990). Patrick Dempsey kills time at an illegal card game in New Jersey before legalization of casino poker there. Here we get a rare filmed record of a player tipping the dealer, and the waving off of obnoxious second hand smoke. The game climaxes when a belligerent, violent player forces Dempsey to draw one card instead of standing pat. "This is a new twist: Gestapo poker." Run also is one of the best-paced movies you'll ever see. 10) The Gunfighter (1950). One of the all-time best serious Westerns, Gregory Peck stars as a notorious gunfighter who only wants to settle down to a calm life, but he is endlessly pestered by every little squirt in the world looking to make a reputation for himself. Despite the serious theme, there are two hysterical scenes. One features two old coots fighting (after a poker dispute). A third old coot watching says, "I’ve seen better fights than this in a prayer meeting." The brief poker scene features the coots playing poker in the local barbershop. When a new man walks in, the coots try to persuade him into the game. The new man says, "I wouldn't sit in this game with cards I made myself." This line has kept me out of many Omaha games over the years! 11) Rounders (1998). Of course I have to include this -- some good poker scenes, some ludicrous poker scenes, and an absurd lead character. This guy is supposed to be able to read his opponents like a book, but he can’t see that his best friend and girlfriend are poisonous, disloyal parasites? Not a very good movie, but some decent poker, and you have to give it a tip of the hat for being the John the Baptist of the 21st Century poker boom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
glceud Posted August 13, 2008 Share Posted August 13, 2008 Re: Poker films/songs Watch Big Deal a series that was shown on BBC1 during the eighties. I watched it recently and I enjoyed just as much as when I was a kid. A classic series aboutr a compuslive gambler. I liked rounders but it is very overrated. Brilliant, did'nt even know it was out on DVD.( in the post as we speak) One I remember best is when he uses his Uncles system at the dogs backing Favs- classic Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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