Casino Wiki Film
Casino (1995) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Casino is a 1995 American epic crime film directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, and Joe Pesci. It is based on the nonfiction book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas by Nicholas Pileggi, who also co-wrote the screenplay for the film with Scorsese. The two had previously collaborated on Goodfellas. Martin Scorsese's fascinating new film 'Casino' knows a lot about the Mafia's relationship with Las Vegas. It's based on a book by Nicholas Pileggi, who had full access to a man who once ran four casinos for the mob, and whose true story inspires the movie's plot. Casino is a 1995 crime film directed by Martin Scorsese that follows a mobster and his rise to success while running a mob-controlled casino in Las Vegas. The film was inspired by the events surrounding the mob-controlled Stardust casino in Las Vegas during the 1970's.
Casino Royale may refer to:
Casino Film Wiki Fr
Casino Royale, a James Bond film starring Daniel Craig Casino Royale (2006 soundtrack) Casino Royale, casino brand at Hotel Splendid in Montenegro; Casino Royale Hotel & Casino, a hotel and casino on the strip in Las Vegas, United States; Casino Royale, site of the 2011 Monterrey casino attack, a massacre that killed 52 in Mexico.
- Casino Royale (novel), the first James Bond novel by Ian Fleming
- 'Casino Royale' (Climax!), a 1954 television adaptation of Fleming's novel for the series Climax!
- Casino Royale (1967 film), a James Bond film parody starring David Niven and Peter Sellers
- Casino Royale (2006 film), a James Bond film starring Daniel Craig
- Casino Royale, casino brand at Hotel Splendid in Montenegro
- Casino Royale Hotel & Casino, a hotel and casino on the strip in Las Vegas, United States
- Casino Royale, site of the 2011 Monterrey casino attack, a massacre that killed 52 in Mexico
- Casino Royale is a brand of casinos on the Royal Caribbean International cruise ships.
- Casino Royale, an Italian funk rock band formed in 1987.
Wiki Casino Movie
Gran Casino | |
---|---|
Directed by | Luis Buñuel |
Produced by | Oscar Dancigers |
Written by | Mauricio Magdaleno Edmundo Báez |
Starring | Libertad Lamarque Jorge Negrete Meche Barba El trio Calaveras |
Distributed by | Ultramar Films |
Release date | |
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | Mexico |
Language | Spanish |
Gran Casino (Alternate title: En el viejo Tampico) is a 1947 Mexican film. It was written by Mauricio Magdaleno and Edmundo Baez, based on a story by Michel Weber, and directed by Luis Buñuel.
Plot[edit]
Gerardo (Jorge Negrete) and his friend Demetrio (Julio Villarreal) are a pair of footloose cowboys in turn-of-the-century Mexico who are in prison on dubious charges. As Gerardo sings and strums on his guitar, Demetrio saws the bars of their cell, enabling them to escape. They come upon a small oil field operated by José Enrique (Francisco Jambrina), an entrepreneur from Argentina who is refusing to sell out to evil oil barons who threaten the workers. Gerardo persuades José to give work to him and his friends, and after he and Demetrio recruit more workers, they're able to rejuvenate the struggling operation. Just as their fortunes are on the rise, however, the oilman disappears and is feared murdered. Demetrio takes over the operation next, but, again, the night before the oil is to start pumping, he goes to the casino and falls for Camelia (Mercedes Barba), the same girl José was last seen with before he vanished, and he too disappears.
José's sister Mercedes (Libertad Lamarque) travels to Mexico to find out what's become of him, and when she learns that Gerardo has taken over as manager, she's convinced that Gerardo and his pals are to blame. Wanting to know more about Gerardo and his cronies, she takes a job as a singer at 'Gran Casino,' a rowdy nightclub near the oil fields. In time, she strikes up a romance with the good-hearted roughneck and learns the identity of her brother's real enemy—Don Fabio (José Baviera), the local front for Big Oil.
Background[edit]
Libertad Lamarque[edit]
From the release of the film Honeysuckle in 1938, Libertad Lamarque was the most popular artist in Argentine cinema.[1] She had made her name on stage and radio as a tango singer and she was able to capitalize on that success by combining her singing and acting abilities in pictures that pulled their melodramatic plots straight from the tales told in popular tangos.[2] She often played the part of a tango singer whose romance with a wealthy suitor is thwarted by his snobbish family, making her a compelling symbol of porteño popular culture with a strong anti-elitist identification.[2] In 1945, Larmarque starred in La cabalgata del circo, a pot-boiler about a theatrical troupe in nineteenth-century Argentina, which included in the cast as a supporting player, Eva Duarte, who was being courted by then Colonel Juan Perón, who was on his way to becoming President of the country.[3] Tensions on the set ran high, as Duarte flaunted her relationship with Argentina's strongman by turning up late every day, having him pick her up from the studio in his state limousine and generally behaving as if she were the star of the picture.[4] When Duarte sat in Lamarque's chair one day, Lamarque slapped her across the face, sparking a cause célèbre that delighted Duarte's many enemies.[3] Lamarque added to the intrigue by suggesting that the two had been vying for the attentions of Perón.[5] After October 17, 1945, Loyalty Day, when demonstrations organized with the cooperation of Duarte resulted in Perón's release from a brief stay in jail, Lamarque's films were banned in Argentina.[4] The next year, after Duarte and Perón had married and Perón had been elected President of Argentina, Lamarque fled Buenos Aires for Mexico City, where her films had been extremely popular for years.[6]
Oscar Dancigers[edit]
A French national of Russian-Jewish origin, Oscar Dancigers had fled the Nazis in 1940, due to his membership in the Communist Party, and settled in Mexico, where in short order he had founded Ultramar Films and achieved considerable success as a small independent producer.[7][8] Dancigers specialized in assisting U.S. film companies with on-location production in Mexico.[9] As such, his company was a direct beneficiary of the American Good Neighbor Policy, under which Mexico received enormous exportations of raw film stock from the U.S. government.[10]
References[edit]
- ^Finkielman, Jorge (2004). The Film Industry in Argentina: An Illustrated Cultural History. Jefferson NC: McFarland. p. 227. ISBN978-0786416288.
- ^ abKarush, Matthew B. (2010). 'Populism, Melodrama, and the Market', in The New Cultural History of Peronism: Power and Identity in Mid-Twentieth-Century Argentina, ed. by Matthew B. Karush and Oscar Chamosa. Durham NC: Duke University Press. p. 27. ISBN978-0822347385.
- ^ abFraser, Nicholas and Marysa Navarro (1996). Evita: The Real Life of Eva Peron. New York: W. W. Norton. p. 42. ISBN978-0393315752.
- ^ abBarnes, John (1996). Evita, First Lady: A Biography of Eva Perón. New York: Grove Press. p. 52. ISBN0-8021-3479-3.
- ^'Libertad Lamarque'. The Telegraph. 14 Dec 2000. Retrieved 5 January 2013.
- ^Azzi, Maria Susana (2002). 'The Tango, Peronism, and Astor Piazzolla During the 1940s and '50s', in From Tejano to Tango: Latin American Popular Music, ed. by Walter Aaron Clark. New York: Routledge. p. 28. ISBN978-0815336402.
- ^Rebecca Mina Schreiber «Cold War Exiles in Mexico» (p. 71)
- ^Polizzotti, Mark (2008). Los Olvidados. London: British Film Institute. p. 22. ISBN978-1844571215.
- ^Simmonds, Roy S (2011). The Two Worlds of William March. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press. p. 288. ISBN978-0817356873.
- ^Schreiber, Rebecca M. (2008). Cold War Exiles in Mexico: U.S. Dissidents and the Culture of Critical Resistance. Minneapolis: Univ Of Minnesota Press. p. 73. ISBN978-0816643080.