CASINO (1995) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | Reaction & Commentary | WOW!!!

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  • Опубликовано: 23 сен 2024

Комментарии • 652

  • @charlize1253
    @charlize1253 Год назад +179

    As a Las Vegas resident, I can tell you that Casino is a VERY accurate history of the town, just with the names changed. Nicki Santoro was based on the real-life Tony Spilotro, who really killed a guy in a vise grip and was buried in a cornfield next to his brother. Ace Rothstein was based on Lefty Rosenthal, who ran the sports book at the Stardust (what the Tangiers was based on) where Spilotro was the muscle. Lefty was really blown up in a car bomb but survived; that happened in the parking lot of a Tony Roma's restaurant that is still there today (on Sahara Ave, just off the strip). Oscar Goodman, who served as mayor Las Vegas, has a quick cameo as himself as a criminal defense lawyer. The Gaming Commission guy who Ace yelled at for taking comps was the late real-life US Senator Harry Reid (who was on the Gaming Commission in the 1970s), and the incident really happened; Reid was investigated for corruption back in the day before becoming a Senator. When Joe Pesci's gang robbed jewelry stores, that was the "Hole in the Wall Gang" that ended up in a famous criminal trial back in the day. Other characters are very recognizable to Vegas old timers. Several scenes were filmed in the actual locations where the real-life events happened.

    • @MrTech226
      @MrTech226 Год назад +12

      Frank Cullotta, former member of the Hole In The Gang, associate of Tony Spilotro, former mobster was technical adviser for this movie. Late character actor, who often plays mobsters, Frank Vincent portrayed Frank Marino based from Cullotta's experiences.

    • @konowd
      @konowd Год назад +8

      I read the book, it’s close to the book, and I’ve heard the movie is very close, almost too close

    • @garykolb4550
      @garykolb4550 Год назад +14

      I’m from Chicago and if I remember correctly, Spilotro was buried in a cornfield in Indiana. His grave was discovered because an unexpected rain caused a depression at the gravesite that the farmer noticed.

    • @charlize1253
      @charlize1253 Год назад +15

      @@MrTech226 I met Frank Cullotta once, about 10 years ago, here in Vegas, where he was part of a Mafia Tour and would tell stories at the end of the tour. He told a funny story: there's a quick scene in the montage of murders where he is the actor who kills a guy by shooting him in the head. Scorsese originally asked him to tell the actor how to do it, but the actor kept screwing it up, so Scorsese had Cullotta play the murderer himself on camera, and it's in the movie. Cullotta is re-enacting an actual murder that he himself committed in the 1970s and got away with! (It's the one where the guy staggers out the door of his house bleeding, and Cullotta follows him into the yard and shoots him in the head from behind)

    • @richardanzlovar5372
      @richardanzlovar5372 Год назад +4

      I live there as well and yes, it’s almost all true. This is my favorite Scorsese movie by far and my favorite De Niro and Pesci movie.

  • @RagingRaven88
    @RagingRaven88 Год назад +58

    Shannon Stone gets so much praise over Basic Instinct, but this movie by far showcases how amazing of an actress she is

    • @MrMpa31
      @MrMpa31 Год назад +11

      "Sharon"

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 Год назад +5

      You are dead on point she is very overlooked in this movie. Not to put down any of my personal favorites Above the Law (1988), Action Jackson (1988), Total Recall (1990), Basic Instinct (1992), The Specialist (1994) The Quick and the Dead (1995), Alpha Dog (2006) or Bobby (2006). But she was truly at the top of her acting game in Casino (1995).

    • @RagingRaven88
      @RagingRaven88 Год назад +4

      ​@@MrMpa31. . . I knew that 😂

    • @lindapgolan7070
      @lindapgolan7070 Год назад +1

      @@vincecommando7575 She was hysterical in The Muse

    • @AmIDeadYet
      @AmIDeadYet Год назад +1

      She's never had a performance as good as this again.

  • @truevulgarian
    @truevulgarian Год назад +40

    You must know that the little old lady who plays the mother in both this movie and Good Fellas is acutally Scrocese's mom, right?
    The way she gets so mad at him swearing is the best thing in this film.

    • @mrtim5363
      @mrtim5363 Год назад +4

      & Scrocese doesn't write lines for his mother, the other actors have a rough outline to work into the day's shoot but mainly, it's responding to whatever Marty's mom says. & The boys love every minute of it because she's not really acting. That's Marty's mom.

    • @airguntherapy8665
      @airguntherapy8665 9 месяцев назад +2

      Have to agree, her expressions were bloody hilarious. I’m sure it was improvised like goodfellas

    • @leob4403
      @leob4403 8 месяцев назад

      Sure it's great but it's pretty condescending to call it "the best thing in this film"

  • @MadRespectTV
    @MadRespectTV Год назад +53

    "...a lot of holes in the desert, and a lot of problems are buried in those holes". So many great lines in this movie. Happy you covered it!

    • @TheWaynos73
      @TheWaynos73 Год назад

      Have you seen the Sesame Street Bert and Ernie dub? Its legendary.

  • @caseymoe816
    @caseymoe816 Год назад +17

    My biggest takeaway from this film has always been “Dig the hole first.” If you don’t, “you’ll be diggin’ holes all freaking day!”

  • @charlize1253
    @charlize1253 Год назад +23

    One of the murders in the montage sequence is a guy getting shot in the top of his head. That was a hit by the real-life hit man Frank Culotta. Culotta plays himself in that scene. He was initially hired as a consultant to tell the actors how to commit the murder, but the actor kept doing it wrong, so Martin Scorsese told Culotta just to re-enact it himself and filmed it. So the scene is of Culotta re-enacting an actual murder he committed years earlier and got away with. (It's the one where the guy staggers out the door of his house bleeding, and Cullotta follows him into the yard and shoots him in the head from behind)

    • @fenix6297
      @fenix6297 Год назад +2

      @@bcfc2947 Yeah, there is a short film about it at the Mob Museum in Vegas - Frank said the craziest thing about it was he was paid more for filming the hit for the movie than he was paid for the hit itself.
      He also owned a Mafia sightseeing tour out in Vegas until he passed away a year or so ago. I don't know if the tour is still running or not, but if it is - it's a pretty cool time. They drive you around town, telling you stories, and showing you places where specific events took place. They show you the outside of the house used in the movie here (right next to the golf course) and the location where Lefty's car was blown up though the restaurant itself is long gone.
      I highly recommend it.

    • @michaelwilber774
      @michaelwilber774 7 месяцев назад

      That's actually wild, I never knew that.

  • @paulpeterson4216
    @paulpeterson4216 Год назад +35

    The characters played by DeNiro and Pesci (among others) are based on real people. DeNiro's was Frank, aka Lefty, Rosenthal who operated the Stardust Casino (Along with the Fremont and the Frontier). Pesci portrayed Tony, aka The Ant, Spilotro. I lived in Vegas at this period, starting in 1979. I used to regularly eat at a fast food joint owned by Spilotro that was about two blocks from my apartment. The car-bomb scene at the beginning was something that really happened, and Rosenthal actually survived it. Tony Spilotro wound up buried in a cornfield in northwest Indiana. But he was not done with a baseball bat, just a bullet to the back of the skull. The bat was an homage to Goodfellas.
    This was about as accurate as to "historical facts" as any gangster movie I have ever seen.

    • @charlize1253
      @charlize1253 Год назад +6

      I live in Vegas! Oscar Goodman, who served as mayor Las Vegas, has a quick cameo as himself as a criminal defense lawyer. The Gaming Commission guy who Ace yelled at for taking comps was the late real-life US Senator Harry Reid (who was on the Gaming Commission in the 1970s), and the incident really happened; Reid was investigated for corruption back in the day before becoming a Senator in an FBI operation called "Operation Clean Face."

    • @lexkanyima2195
      @lexkanyima2195 Год назад

      ​@@charlize1253?

    • @MeteorologistAlsoGoPutin
      @MeteorologistAlsoGoPutin Год назад

      Actually, Spilotro and his brother were beaten to death in the basement of a house. The guys who carried out their murder beat them to death with their fists. The cornfield part is true though. Tony and his brother were found by a farmer I think?

    • @pete_lind
      @pete_lind Год назад

      Frank Rosenthal and Geraldine McGee did have three kids not just one , thats like the one thing , also names are all changed for legal issues , just to be sure .

    • @USCanthony
      @USCanthony Год назад

      @@charlize1253 Are you referring to the State Senator in the movie who was played by Dick Smothers?

  • @danieloconnor1005
    @danieloconnor1005 Год назад +16

    The no-blood gunshots were done by a .22 caliber pistol. The silencer slows it down even more so there's no exit wound.

    • @norwegianblue2017
      @norwegianblue2017 Год назад +7

      Soft point .22 is the perfect assassin round. It actually ricochets around in the skull because it isn't powerful enough to exit.

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 Год назад +1

      It's not always the best way to kill someone. Some people actually have survived a shot from a. 22 caliber. Mostly because it isn't a powerful enough weapon to always guarantee the person will die for sure. Which is why so many people us higher caliber weapons to make sure their target doesn't survive.

    • @energeez
      @energeez Год назад +3

      @@vincecommando7575yea , A shot. not 10

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 Год назад

      @@energeez There have even been people that have survived multiple shots from a .22 caliber.

    • @BarryHart-xo1oy
      @BarryHart-xo1oy Месяц назад

      Good to know.

  • @marcella6969
    @marcella6969 Год назад +4

    FUN FACT: The character that Dickey Smothers plays is actually Senator Harry Reid!

  • @bobbabai
    @bobbabai Год назад +4

    Dicky Smothers was the 1980 commissioner! I don't think I've ever seen him in a movie before!

    • @visaman
      @visaman Год назад +1

      He was the Senator. He was based on Senator Harry Reid, they renamed the airport after him.

  • @graciefolden2359
    @graciefolden2359 Год назад +8

    I never understood why Lester wasn't "properly" dealt with, anonymously, in the beginning.

    • @visaman
      @visaman Год назад +3

      He wasn't worth the trouble, just a two bit Golf Hustler, like Happy Gilmore.

  • @kevinramsey417
    @kevinramsey417 Год назад +14

    Casino's an incredible flick. Martin Scorsese can do no wrong. He is a true master of his medium.

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 Год назад

      He's right up there with the absolute best directors in history. Some of my favorites are without a doubt John Milius, Michael Mann, William Friedkin, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Quentin Tarantino, Oliver Stone, Brian De Palma and James Cameron.

  • @paulpeterson4216
    @paulpeterson4216 Год назад +12

    And yes, I occasionally watched the "Frank Rosenthal" show on TV in Vegas. For some reason all of the stars appearing in town wanted to be on his show.

  • @jw870206
    @jw870206 Год назад +22

    The guy playing the incompetent guy juiced in by the County Commissioner is played by Joe Bob Briggs, host of "The Last Drive-In" and host of the cult classic 1990s TNT segment "MonsterVision." And I know you recognized James Woods, the voice of Hades in Disney's "Hercules," playing Lester Diamond. Also, that scar on her arm is likely an inoculation scar for smallpox. I had a white spot on my skin where I got mine.

    • @mikepetersen5485
      @mikepetersen5485 Год назад +2

      Checked comments just for someone answering the scar question, you beat me to it.

    • @xavvi
      @xavvi Год назад +2

      Joe Bob is the GOAT

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 Год назад +1

      Joe Bob Briggs' real name is John Bloom. I remember him well from his days on TNT's Monstervision in the '90s. He is and will forever be one hell of a cool badass legend.

    • @AbrahamdeLacy-xm8sb
      @AbrahamdeLacy-xm8sb Год назад +4

      James Woods is an awesome actor, too bad he seems to be on the “never allowed to act again” list. He's only doing voice acting nowadays, it seems.

    • @Cagon415
      @Cagon415 Год назад +1

      I can't believe I never realized that. I loved that show 😂

  • @styles2980
    @styles2980 Год назад +20

    Goodfellas and Casino are the best examples, IMO, of movie narration from the character perspective. I have re-watched multiple times, maybe once a year since they were released.

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 Год назад +2

      Another great example is Carlito's Way (1993). Definitely one of Al Pacino's and Brian De Palma's best movies.

    • @KrazyKat007
      @KrazyKat007 Год назад +1

      I would say Martin Sheen in
      Apocalypse Now does the character VO narration better than all these examples

    • @GodlessG0D
      @GodlessG0D Год назад +2

      Agreed, I would add City of God

    • @leob4403
      @leob4403 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@vincecommando7575 Carlitos way is nowhere near as good as Casino or Godfellas

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 8 месяцев назад

      @@leob4403 Most people would seriously disagree with you on that. It may not be Al Pacino's absolute best film. But it is regarded as one of his best performances.

  • @jonbruton3557
    @jonbruton3557 Год назад +7

    In "hits" often a small caliber weapon is used [usually a 22 pistol]. That is so the bullets don't go through and make so much mess. Also, it is easily muffled [not being a large charge to start with]

    • @keithmays8076
      @keithmays8076 Год назад

      True. And there's that "funny" little aspect of a .22 bouncing around inside the head turning anything into mush. .22s were notorious for ricocheting inside bodies and winding up in the oddest places. One story I remember was of a guy getting shot in the foot, and the bullet went through the foot, bounced off the concrete, back into the foot, up the leg, punctured the femoral artery in his leg, then took a trip through the artery until it wound up stuck in either the aorta arch or in one of the ventricles.

  • @jeffpawlinski3210
    @jeffpawlinski3210 Год назад +3

    True Story: Legendary character actor Richard Riehle, (from Milwaukee) who plays the straight-laced Banker in Casino and was in Office Space as Tom "Jump To Conclusions" Symkowski (and 100+ other movies) told me this story one night over drinks while he was in Milwaukee visiting relatives: Director Martin Scorsese gathered the entire cast together before the first day of filming and said, "There will be a quiet, solitary, older man watching each scene you film. Under NO Circumstances are you to speak to this man. However, if he pulls you aside and tells you to re-shoot the scene according to his wishes and experience, do EXACTLY as he says!" My mouth was agape when Mr. Riehle told me that. Scorsese had a "Made-Man" from the Vegas connected Mob on set, wow!

  • @svperstar
    @svperstar Год назад +2

    Never once, ever, watching this movie have I ever thought "poor Ginger" lol, and here I am, playing a drinking game every time you pity her.

  • @crowtcameron
    @crowtcameron Год назад +6

    You made a lot of astute observations about the lighting/cinematography in Casino. This was Scorsese's 1st collaboration with cinematographer/director of photography Robert Richardson, one of the best DPs of all time. He's worked with Scorsese many times. For example: The Aviator, Shutter Island, & Hugo. Scorsese had always been brilliant with lighting and camera movement but I think Richardson brought it to another level.
    Richardson has also worked many times with Oliver Stone. The cinematography in JFK and Natural Bork Killers is especially excellent. Richardson has worked with Quentin Tarantino on all his films since the Kill Bill films. And like he did with Scorsese, he made something that was already great (Tarantino 's films) into something even greater. My favorite cinematographers alive today are Roger Deakins, Emmanuel Lubezki, and then Robert Richardson.

  • @Hank..
    @Hank.. Год назад +4

    that whole "metal plate under the driver's seat" thing is true btw. They put it in there to balance the car's weight, and it really did shield him from the worst of the car bomb. The deaths of the real life Nicky and his brother were MORE brutal in real life; they were buried in that cornfield, but killed in the city, and no bats were used. They were punched, kicked, and stomped to death, so it would've been more drawn out than in the movie.

    • @leob4403
      @leob4403 8 месяцев назад +1

      I'm not sure that getting all your bones broken by baseball bats is that much better honestly

  • @xxtank999xx
    @xxtank999xx Год назад +10

    Even though The Tangiers is fictional , it is based on The Startdurst casino which was located where Resorts World is now on the north part of the Vegas strip

  • @o0pinkdino0o
    @o0pinkdino0o Год назад +7

    Three catalysts to the impending apocalypse - Sam gets Lester beaten in front of Ginger, Ginger shags Nicky, and when Sam fires the dumbass on the fruit machines that it all comes crashing down. It is Sam's attention to detail that stops him from employing someone that may damage his business. People like this that have to be employed are called empty suits, and they usually work at an empty desk. Sam should have made an empty desk role for the kid and that would have saved him.

    • @ronweber1402
      @ronweber1402 Год назад

      That's what I've always thought. Why didn't Sam just give him a job like greeting people at the door and giving them directions, there voila, one dumb dumb occupied and you have the good will of the powers that be. As to Lester he just should have had Nicky dig a hole in the desert.

    • @jdemarco
      @jdemarco Год назад

      Because Sam didn't realize that he wasn't home. But home's where they're gonna send you if it hairlips the governor...

  • @OneEyedDeacon
    @OneEyedDeacon Год назад +12

    The reason why Robert DeNiro's character didn't get arrested at the end is because he was actually an informant for the FBI. However, this was not revealed publically until well after the movie was released, when the actual person the character was based off of had passed away.

    • @BlackFlightNY
      @BlackFlightNY Год назад

      Probably got treated like a 2nd class citizen due to not being Italian. But on the flip side, he didn’t have to swear an “oath” to not snitch…because he wasn’t Italian 😏😂

  • @straypigs
    @straypigs Год назад +7

    I saw it at the theatre on 6th Avenue and West 4th. Smoked a joint in Washington Square Park before it, lol. The movie was DAZZLING on a big screen. In between Goodfellas and Casino, Scorsese and De Niro actually had their biggest blockbuster together: the suspense thriller "Cape Fear" Definitely check that out! (And "Raging Bull"!) Some trivia not listed: When Andy Cohen asked Sharon Stone who was the best kisser she had to kiss in any of her movies, she didn't even hesitate: "Robert De Niro in Casino" was the shocking answer! (Or maybe it's not so shocking!). The funny thing is that a.) De Niro is known to be very professional, technical and choreographed in love scenes and does not like deviation. (ask Aubrey Plaza). and b.) Sharon Stone is not his "type", De NIro has dated only black women since before he was famous. So......whatever she felt from De Niro's kisses.....it was almost definitely all acting!!!!

  • @LockeDemosthenes2
    @LockeDemosthenes2 Год назад +8

    It's not as good as Goodfellas, but Casino has grown on me over the years. I now consider it one of the best crime movies ever made.

    • @joeblankenship377
      @joeblankenship377 Год назад

      They're more or less the same movie. And I'm fine with it because they're so entertaining.

  • @USCanthony
    @USCanthony Год назад +3

    The Tangiers wasn't exactly fictional. This movie is based on the real life of the Robert DeNiro character. The script was adapted from the book about his life. That means that the Tangiers while having a fictional name was actually based upon a real casino. That casino was the Stardust. I have been to the real Stardust many times back when it existed and it is really something to watch this movie when you have memories of the real casino. It was mentioned near the beginning of this movie that Ace was an innovator and one of the things he brought into the casino from the streets was the sports book. Let me tell you, the Stardust had an amazing sports book. At the time when I used to occasionally go to this casino, I had no idea that the sports book in the casino was the first sports book in a casino. They were common in casinos. But it all made sense once watching this movie. The sports book in the Stardust was huge and was very cutting edge for its time. If you have ever been to the Stardust and remember the history, this movie is that much better.

    • @JosephWoolf-ct4bt
      @JosephWoolf-ct4bt 6 месяцев назад

      True, however the movie was filmed in the middle of the night at the Riviera hotel and casino that use to be across the street from Circus Circus. It was imploded in 2016. It's just an empty lot now!

  • @michaelsandoval15
    @michaelsandoval15 Год назад +2

    In case you didnt know, this was actually based on the Chicago mob. The city is never mentioned and i think “The Outfit” is only mentioned once when they introduce Remo. I say this because a lot of people i know automatically thought this was another movie about the NY mob and it wasn’t.

  • @wills.364
    @wills.364 Год назад +2

    My favorite scene is where DeNiro is upset about the blueberry muffin lol

  • @ROBOTRIX_eu
    @ROBOTRIX_eu Год назад +2

    Intouchables (french 2011) ...... Amelie (french 2001) ...The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014) ..... Grand Tourino (2008)

  • @kissmy_butt1302
    @kissmy_butt1302 Год назад +1

    The preferred gun for an assassination is a .22. The bullet is soft lead and small caliber. It will penetrate the skull, flatten to a disk and bounce around. It doesn't have enough force and mass to punch out the other side of someone's head. It also leads a small entrance wound so it doesn't spurt blood everywhere.

  • @williampilling2168
    @williampilling2168 Год назад +2

    The real Tangiers was the Stardust Casino. They were known for a long time, to be the ones who came up with the opening lines for sports betting.

  • @ricardosobral5563
    @ricardosobral5563 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is awsome. And I love the ending, cause throughout the movie Sam is allways loyal and truthfull with everyone he interacts with, even when he's diabolic

  • @bradsullivan2495
    @bradsullivan2495 Год назад +4

    Robert DeNiro's right-hand man was indeed Don Rickles.

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 Год назад +8

    Nice reaction Shanelle. This was an excellent film and well presented for a three hour film.

    • @PSYCHIC_PSYCHO
      @PSYCHIC_PSYCHO Год назад

      With better editing they could have shaved off a few more minutes

  • @stobe187
    @stobe187 Год назад +3

    Every single outfit De Niro wears is straight fire.

  • @therickman1990
    @therickman1990 6 месяцев назад

    That intro line about the holes in the desert I will never forget. That was gold

  • @jw870206
    @jw870206 Год назад +1

    Another interesting piece of trivia: The older gentleman who asks John Nanz before putting one in his dome point blank, "Where you goin, jagoff!?" is the late Frank Culotta, a guy who was part of the Chicago Outfit who was at the center of the skim.

  • @susanliltz3875
    @susanliltz3875 Год назад +1

    The guy playing the part of “Andy” near the beginning who sat by the pool with Robert DeNiro that was “Alan King” he was an old time stand up comic like Don Rickles , always had a cigar in his hand and told little funny stories or one liners !!

  • @Hardrock1a
    @Hardrock1a Год назад +11

    That circle scar was from polio vaccine back in the day, a lot of people got that scar, some of us got lucky and didn’t. Got my shot at school in kindergarten, two of my friends that got it the same time ended up with them.

    • @weaslemanatu
      @weaslemanatu Год назад

      FYI, those are small pox vaccine scars. You can look it up in Google images.

    • @caseymoe816
      @caseymoe816 Год назад +1

      I don’t have one; I got two! Had a really bad reaction to mine, so they gave me another just for good measure. Probably why I don’t get sick that often.

    • @NYRangers928
      @NYRangers928 Год назад

      It is actually from the smallpox vaccine. Many people today don't have it since they stopped giving the smallpox vaccine.

    • @MrSheckstr
      @MrSheckstr Год назад +1

      They stopped using that delivery method in the early 70s… I had a short lived alternative that was a thumb ring with a bunch of tiny needles clipped in at random spots on the “jewel” … the vaccine was poured into a tiny bottle cap bowl with a sponge and the needles were dipped into the sponge….. then it was applied to the underside of the forearm instead of shoulder…. The result , if anything, was a small cluster of random freckles instead of the leech head scar

    • @MikeSmith-zi2qn
      @MikeSmith-zi2qn Год назад

      The circular scar was actually caused by a positive result of receiving the smallpox vaccine.

  • @JacobPMendoza
    @JacobPMendoza Год назад +2

    One of my favorite mob movies ever!!!!
    Glad you watched this.
    Sharon Stone’s performance in this film, she was nominated for an Oscar.
    She should’ve won!

    • @lexkanyima2195
      @lexkanyima2195 Год назад

      Why ?

    • @Ivy94F
      @Ivy94F 10 месяцев назад

      @@lexkanyima2195 I remember that susan sarandon won for dead man walking. Kinda hard to argue with that if you saw the film, but oscar noms for best actress can go to any one of those women and it would he justified. Especially that year.

  • @AnthonyLaMastra
    @AnthonyLaMastra Год назад +1

    The “old circular scar” on everyone’s arm you made a comment on is the scar left by the old way doctors used to vaccinate people against smallpox. Since smallpox was eradicated, people don’t get them anymore. I’m 49, I don’t have one of those scars but my dad did.

  • @kalphil4385
    @kalphil4385 Год назад +5

    I remember seeing this movie in the theater when it first came out. The scene when Joe Pesci's character and his brother were killed was very disturbing. But it was still a great film.

  • @IMold363
    @IMold363 Год назад +1

    The old guy assassins at the end were real ex hitmen who were hired to help the films authenticity! Chilling stuff

  • @Standard_Jay
    @Standard_Jay Год назад +3

    The hitman near the end sequence is played by Frank Cullotta, a real-life mobster whose career in the Chicago/Las Vegas mob gave inspiration to the film. The informant his character kills towards the end in Costa Rica is based on an actual murder that Frank Cullotta himself actually committed.

  • @vwlssnvwls3262
    @vwlssnvwls3262 Год назад +2

    I think the long takes in movies like this help keep the audience in the moment, and make it feel less like they are just watching a movie.

  • @t.c.thompson2359
    @t.c.thompson2359 Год назад +2

    From what I understand the real "Ginger" was much more a victim of Lefty "Ace" than the Stone performance

  • @robbiereacts22
    @robbiereacts22 Год назад +3

    Sharon Stone’s acting is incredible in this film

  • @charlize1253
    @charlize1253 Год назад +2

    The gunshots didn't bleed because the mob used small-caliber .22 pistols. .22's are what kids used to use for target practice, they're not much more powerful than a good BB gun. If you're 10 feet away they only cause minor injuries, but at point blank range they can kill if you fire several shots, especially into the head. The mob used them because they're so weak that they're silent and there's no explosive effect and very little blood.

  • @rrmemphis427
    @rrmemphis427 Год назад +4

    In that craps table scene, Ginger was stealing chips from the guy she was with (or standing next to, I don't remember if it's ever specified that she was actually WITH him). She was putting his chips in her purse when she thought he wasn't looking.

  • @Xsyfrx
    @Xsyfrx Год назад +1

    Fun tip: The mom is Scorsese's mom, she and Scorsese's dad played the roles in Goodfellas.

  • @fenix6297
    @fenix6297 Год назад +1

    You can take your chips off the table whenever you want. She was stealing chips from the other player (not the dealer) which was the problem.
    The blackjack cheater was signaling the other cheater what the dealer's hidden card was. In Blackjack, you only get to see one of the dealer's cards before you make your own play. You make a guess on what the other card is, because that affects how you play. If you guess wrong, you can bust your own hand or stand on a weak hand when it would have been more advantageous to play it differently.
    Knowing BOTH cards gives the player a significant advantage as they will know whether or not the dealer has a strong hand and what their chances of busting are.

  • @tyjuanwilliams8719
    @tyjuanwilliams8719 Год назад

    I’m a native Chicagoan. The movie is loosely based on The Chicago Mob aka The Outfit. Robert Deniro’s character, Sam “Ace” Rothstien is based on Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal. Joe Pesci’s character, Nicky Santorro is based on Anthony “The Ant” Spillotro. Sharon Stone’s character Ginger is based on Geri Mc Gee. The character Rino Gaggi is based on Tony Acardo who was the boss of The Outfit at the time in which this was. Tony Spillotro was beaten to death and found in a cornfield in NW Indiana in 1986.

  • @blastingweevil2968
    @blastingweevil2968 Год назад +9

    it was based on a true story. inspired by the life of Frank Rosenthal who managed a few casino's in Las Vegas for the Chicago mob back in the 1970s and 1980s.

    • @vincecommando7575
      @vincecommando7575 Год назад +1

      Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal was overjoyed when he heard that Robert De Niro was playing him in the movie. He said "Robert De Niro's one of the greatest actors of his generation."

  • @jwillum
    @jwillum Год назад +1

    I saw the animatronic they used for Nicki when he was being buried alive years ago at The Mob Museum in Las Vegas. It was gone the last time I was there. Always loved this movie.

  • @juhawks37
    @juhawks37 2 месяца назад

    Artie Piscano: "Ma, I got eyes in the back of my head!"
    *backs into a stack of olive oil, knocking them over*

  • @EJBing
    @EJBing Год назад +2

    the guy on the left leading Nicky out of the courthouse is the real Lawyer who represented Nicky. he was also the mayor of Las Vegas for many years

    • @visaman
      @visaman Год назад +1

      The Mob Museum in Las Vegas, named the Men's room after him. Oscar Goldman.

  • @anniethenonnymouse
    @anniethenonnymouse Год назад +2

    Kudos for noticing the smallpox injection site that everyone had way back then.. as I recall, they lined us up at school and used this gun-thingy... public health measures were VERY different once upon a time! Just a reminder to us old folks that some things DO change LoL Love your vibe, Shanelle :)

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Год назад +3

      My parents both have the scars, i always wanted one! Haha thanks for the context and the super thanks :)

  • @lenforstell1139
    @lenforstell1139 Год назад

    😂 6:19 “Stab him! (smiling and laughing reaction)”
    9:55 “Uhhh, I don’t like that smack…”
    😂 😂

  • @cheebagardens1759
    @cheebagardens1759 Год назад +2

    24:25 That’s Scorsese’s mom. She makes cameos in a lot of his films.

  • @moviesbye9294
    @moviesbye9294 Год назад +3

    DeNiro just came from the Barbie premiere in the beginning

  • @vincecommando7575
    @vincecommando7575 Год назад +1

    This movie is epic and is one of my all time favorite movies ever. One of my top favorite scenes is when they show Tony Dogs and his goons shoot up Remo's bar. Which pretty much sums up the style of the Irish Mob kill a few guys and no one will dare challenge them. While the Italian Mafia doesn't stop killing until no one dares challenge them. Also Artie Piscano's mom is played by Catherine Scorsese who is Martin Scorsese's mother. Trudy is played by Claudia Haro who is Joe Pesci's ex-wife. The hitman wearing glasses is played by Frank Cullotta who was a real life mobster and friend of Tony "The Ant" Spilotro. Frank Cullotta also inspired the character Frankie Marino played by Frank Vincent.

  • @mauz4588
    @mauz4588 Год назад +5

    "It was amateur night, and you could tell" is my favorite line from the movie.

  • @thomasgriffiths6758
    @thomasgriffiths6758 Год назад +2

    I attended UNLV in the early nineties and I got a job in the summer working the hard count room at the Dunes hotel before it was imploded of course and I worked taking the coins out of the slot machines at night and bringing them into a count room just like you see in the movie, I saw hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of assorted coins while being escorted by armed security. It was something to be seen in quite impressive.

  • @mateuszmattias
    @mateuszmattias Год назад

    Me and a friend went to the movies in 1995 to watch this on a monday night, the late show, and it turned out we were the only ones in the whole theater, so we could sit and watch this on a huge screen, yet talk like we were in someones living room which was kind of fun. We were both chain smokers at the time, and about 2 hours in we actually thought of lighting up in the theater but thought they might have smoke detectors so we didn't.
    Since the movie is more than 3 hours long we were also the very last visitors to leave a bit past eleven. It was a very special movie night, and since we are still close firends meeting fairly often, every now and then we still talk about that evening when we had an entire movie theater to ourselves.

  • @ravensshadow2179
    @ravensshadow2179 Год назад +1

    I seen this movie more time then I can count and never noticed the light. It might be the a spot light because in a casino everyone is watching everyone else and the audience is watching the movie. Also I hear a rumor or fan theory that "Lefty" Rosenthal was a unnamed CI and unindicted co-conspirators and helped make the case against the bosses.

  • @toecutterjenkins
    @toecutterjenkins Год назад +2

    The circle thing on the arm was from the old polio vaccines

  • @paulpeacock1181
    @paulpeacock1181 Год назад +1

    A good companion film to Casino would be Bugsy(1991). Bugsy is a bio-pic of gangster Busby Siegel who in 1940’s was instrumental in building the first casino in Las Vegas. Stars Warren Beatty and his future wife Annette Bening. Ten Oscar nominations.

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 Год назад +15

    Based on a true story on how the Chicago Mob ruled Las Vegas with an iron fist from 1945 to 1985.

    • @elizandropedraza1286
      @elizandropedraza1286 Год назад +3

      This movie here is the probably the best top three movie of all time ! 😒🇺🇸🇮🇹🇲🇽

  • @Gengrel
    @Gengrel Год назад +1

    Rosenthal used to run a gaming site where you could pay for membership and get his picks. I remember looking him up years ago when he was still alive and coming across it.

  • @christophermitchell6307
    @christophermitchell6307 Год назад +2

    Martin Scorsese got Joe pesci to play a mean and nasty son of a b**** in both goodfellas and casino and Joe played both parts to absolute perfection.

  • @nevrogers8198
    @nevrogers8198 Год назад +1

    Definitely see Raging Bull. In my view Scorsese's best work, and DeNiro's best performance, along with a LOT of other good things (cinematography, sound, editing and possibly the best sporting scenes ever filmed). Now THAT'S a character study.

  • @mmarzett
    @mmarzett Год назад +2

    You facial reactions are absolute GOLD!

  • @quixote6942
    @quixote6942 Год назад +1

    I saw the Movie when it came out, and was living in Vegas and reading about it as this all went down. I even saw the Rosenthal show when he had Frankie Avalon on.

  • @LilGamez21
    @LilGamez21 Год назад +3

    Funny, I said today at work that I was going to download this movie when I get home. And I am. Now I'm watching this reaction. 😂

  • @visaman
    @visaman Год назад +1

    I read the book first, years before the movie was filmed. I also read The Last Mafiaso, about Jimmy Tge Weasel, and The Green Felt Jungle, about Las Vegas in the 1950s. I lived through the movie, from the newspaper headlines, I read in the 70s and 80's.

  • @ToreDL87
    @ToreDL87 21 день назад

    "And that's that"
    Probably a throwback to when Tommy got whacked (I believe that's the word you were looking for at the start btw) in Goodfellas

  • @Wannabe_Baby
    @Wannabe_Baby Год назад +1

    I think Shanelle would make a great gangster. I liked hearing the accent come out during this reaction.

  • @bobbyg7102
    @bobbyg7102 Год назад +2

    Now you need to see ' A Bronx Tale'

  • @ninja_tony
    @ninja_tony Год назад +1

    Scorsese is definitely my favorite director (Kubrick is a close second). If you haven’t seen it, you should check out his movie from the 80’s called “After Hours”. It’s unlike anything else he’s ever made, but it’s so interesting. Without spoiling anything, it’s just about a guy in NYC that is having the craziest night of his life and DESPERATELY wants to go home lol. It’s intriguing, hilarious, and one of the best time capsules of what mid-80’s NYC was like.

  • @johnfisher8843
    @johnfisher8843 Год назад

    Best opening credit sequence in a movie. It’s so over the top Las Vegas.

  • @unusual686
    @unusual686 Год назад +1

    There should absolutely be an equal number of blueberries in each muffin.

    • @saagisharon8595
      @saagisharon8595 Год назад +1

      10 in real life but then there's the size of each one

  • @Shawn-mo6dh
    @Shawn-mo6dh Год назад +1

    FYI Nikki's lawyer was the real lawyer in the real story. And future mayor of LV

  • @davidphillips-y8r
    @davidphillips-y8r Год назад +1

    23:47, the guy on nickyi's right is a real life, famous mob lawyer who later became the mayor of Las Vegas.

  • @Ian-lx1iz
    @Ian-lx1iz Год назад

    _Where_ was I when I first saw 'Casino'?
    Actually, I watched it first on a DVD playing in a black Lincoln Continental drop-head traveling in a motorcade through Deeley Plaza, Dallas.
    The scene with Ace's car blowing up, played just as I past a pretty grassy hillock off to the right there, by the roadside.
    lol

  • @ecbenson98
    @ecbenson98 Год назад +3

    Another Vegas movie you would probably enjoy is The Cooler, with William H. Macy, Maria Bello and Alec Baldwin. It was kind of a comeback role for Baldwin

  • @anonymous19844
    @anonymous19844 8 месяцев назад +1

    I auditioned for a craps dealing job at the casino, the Stardust, & for the gangsters this movie was about. I naively thought my considerable experience would be an asset. Instead, the manager told me, "You are too good. You know too much." They didn't hire me. I found out later they were crooks who wouldn't hire me because there was so much crooked stuff & gaming commission violations going on that they didn't want me to spot it & maybe report them to the proper authorities. A less experienced friend who worked there was murdered. To this day, about 50 years later, I still wonder if she was stealing from them or what the other reason why THEY MIGHT have killed her.

  • @thamoose2179
    @thamoose2179 Год назад +2

    The real Ace Rothstein's name was Lefty Rosenthal

  • @neiltambeau7710
    @neiltambeau7710 Год назад +8

    Great movie, but I always found it disturbing with how violent and real it was. But amazing cast and performances.

  • @michaelcoulter1725
    @michaelcoulter1725 Год назад +1

    Behind every high-powered Italian man is his mom yelling at his ass shanell that was epic

  • @FredPena-rd5cf
    @FredPena-rd5cf Год назад

    I read the story of Casino many years earlier in Robert Blakeys 1981 book, the Plot to kill the president. Blakey had been chair of the 1977 house select committee on assassinations. And this was his personal book on the findings. In it he uncovers the whole Vegas mob story.

  • @Migz2682
    @Migz2682 Год назад +3

    "A Bronx Tale" please
    Goodfellas meets romeo and juliette

  • @MrQuinn-tc3uo
    @MrQuinn-tc3uo Год назад +1

    Many acadamy members felt the movie was a goodfellas clone. Hence, the lack of nominations, but the movie was still critically acclaimed, and did well at the box office.

    • @lexkanyima2195
      @lexkanyima2195 Год назад

      It was not a equivalent of a Goodfellas sequel

  • @ronaldmillier9484
    @ronaldmillier9484 Год назад +2

    Shanelle Riccio The smallpox vaccine usually left behind a distinctive round scar on the upper arm during the healing process.

  • @susanliltz3875
    @susanliltz3875 Год назад +1

    “Wacked” is the word you were looking for at the beginning when a guy gets taken out!!

  • @otisroseboro5613
    @otisroseboro5613 Год назад +1

    As Always Love Seeing Your Reactions To All These Great Movie's 😊😊

  • @Cagon415
    @Cagon415 Год назад +1

    As I'm sure other people will mention, the Tangiers was based on Stardust.

    • @visaman
      @visaman Год назад +1

      I was so sad when the Stardust was torn down. You can see it in Vegas Vacation.

  • @johnpittsii7524
    @johnpittsii7524 Год назад +2

    Hi Shanelle hope you are having an great and awesome day ❤

  • @graciefolden2359
    @graciefolden2359 Год назад +1

    I remember when it was weird to see someone, without, the Smallpox or TB (Tuberculosis/BCG) Vaccine Inoculation scar on their upper arm. Sharon Stone's must be a TB/BCG scar because it's raised where the Smallpox scar would be depressed or indented like a pot mark.

  • @doomhare75
    @doomhare75 Год назад +2

    Wolf of Wallstreet just as fun btw. You got one more!

  • @christopherten-eyck4473
    @christopherten-eyck4473 Год назад +1

    721 very good that is Donald Rickles 👏 👌 good job shannel you surprised me with your knowledge of actors 👏 👍 👌 😉. Thanks for your reaction,enjoy watching you explain the different shots the camera men are getting 😉.