Croupier (film)

Croupier

Croupier DVD cover
Directed by Mike Hodges
Produced by Jonathan Cavendish
Christine Ruppert
Written by Paul Mayersberg
Starring Clive Owen
Alex Kingston
Gina McKee
Kate Hardie
Nicholas Ball
Music by Simon Fisher-Turner
Cinematography Michael Garfath
Edited by Les Healey
Release dates
  • 18 June 1999
Running time
94 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Croupier is a 1998 British film starring Clive Owen as a croupier, and was directed by Mike Hodges. It was the released on DVD by Alliance Atlantis in Canada and Image Entertainment in the USA. The film attracted a strong critical following in North America, and helped to launch Clive Owen's acting career there.

Croupier was disqualified from the Academy Awards after it was shown on Dutch television.

The film has been classified as neo-noir. It uses interior monologues in the style of many early noir detective films.

Plot

Jack Manfred (Clive Owen) is an aspiring writer going nowhere fast. To make ends meet and against his better judgment, he takes a job as a croupier. The interview was set up by his father, a small-time hustler back home in South Africa.

Jack finds himself drawn into the casino world, and the job gradually takes over his life, as it apparently had in South Africa. He goes drinking with Matt (Paul Reynolds), a croupier whom he knows is cheating the casino. He sleeps with a fellow croupier named Bella (Kate Hardie) in contravention to casino policy. His relationship with girlfriend Marion (Gina McKee) begins to deteriorate when he lets her read part of his book about a cold, unfeeling croupier who enjoys seeing gamblers lose —a character transparently based on Jack himself. It falls apart completely when Bella confronts Jack at the apartment where he lives with Marion, and accuses him of getting her fired and tells Marion about the one-night stand she had with Jack. Upon hearing the news, Marion breaks up with Jack.

One gambler, Jani (Alex Kingston), tries to befriend Jack —another serious violation of casino rules. Jani shows him bruises she got from gambling creditors and asks Jack to be the inside man for a planned robbery at the casino. All he has to do is raise the alarm when a gambler cheats at his table. Jack eventually agrees and accepts a £10,000 advance against an additional £10,000 if all goes well. In doing so, Jack realizes that Jani's injuries were faked.

Marion reconciles with Jack but discovers that he is involved in something criminal and tries to foil it. On the night of the robbery, Jack raises the alarm anyway and gets beaten by the gambler as a distraction while others try to grab the money. They fail, and Jack and Marion have an argument but she stays with him.

When a late-night knock at the door comes, Jack assumes it to be the casino robbers demanding their advance money. Instead, it is a policeman, who informs him that Marion has been killed in an apparent hit-and-run.

Jack finishes his book and gets it published anonymously. It is a big success, but he doesn't change anything about his life, continuing to work as a croupier and live in his basement flat, not even buying the new car he wanted.

Jack goes on with his life and gets another call, this one from Jani, who congratulates him on playing his part in the attempted robbery and implies that she benefited significantly. Then she puts his father on the phone, and he implies that he set up the croupier job for Jack in order to arrange for the attempted robbery, and he benefited as well.

Stunned but amused, Jack hangs up. Just then, Bella appears from the bedroom and kisses him.

Cast

Reception

The film critics aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes gave a 98% positive rating based on 53 reviews.[1] Critic Roger Ebert gave the film three stars, remarking that the point of the film was not the plot, but the atmosphere and characterization. He also lauded the realistic depiction of the casino itself.[2] Stephen Holden in the New York Times called the movie, "a breezy meditation on life as a game of chance".[3]

The film grossed $7,075,068 at the box office.[4]

References

  1. Croupier. Rotten Tomatoes.
  2. Croupier Roger Ebert.com.
  3. Stephen Holden for The New York Times, April 21, 2000
  4. "Croupier (2000)". Box Office Mojo. 2002-08-28. Retrieved 2013-05-08.

External links