Director Mark Rydell is often good at evoking the desperation and superstitious hope that's a big part of the gaming spirit. This is nothing new, either, but it's enough to keep the movie intriguing enough to watch.
Even Money (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:33
Fresh:8
Rotten:25
Average Rating:4.1/10
Consensus: Even Money is so obsessed with portraying the ills of gambling it forgets to develop compelling or likable characters.
Runtime: 1 hr 52 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Following in the tradition of such interweaving ensemble dramas as MAGNOLIA, CRASH, and TRAFFIC, EVEN MONEY features an all-star cast set in the world of addiction--to money, power, love, and... Following in the tradition of such interweaving ensemble dramas as MAGNOLIA, CRASH, and TRAFFIC, EVEN MONEY features an all-star cast set in the world of addiction--to money, power, love, and gambling. Kim Basinger stars as Carolyn, a married woman having trouble writing her second book. Although she tells her husband, Tom (a compassionate Ray Liotta), that she is working in a nearby cafe, she is actually spending all her time--and the family money--gambling in a casino, where she is befriended by Walter (Danny DeVito, one of the film's producers), a lowlife magician who wants to recapture his old glory. Walter is desperate for the help of a local crime lord, the mysterious Ivan, but Ivan's right-hand man, the malicious Victor (Tim Roth), merely toys with Walter while coming down hard on Clyde (Forest Whitaker), a plumber who owes Victor a lot of dough. Victor is threatening to kill Clyde unless his brother, Darius (Nick Cannon), a college basketball star, starts shaving points in critical games. Meanwhile, Augie (Jay Mohr) and Murph (Grant Sullivan) are getting into the loan shark business themselves, not quite understanding how dangerous it can be. Looking over all of this is Detective Brunner (Kelsey Grammer), a grizzled old cop reminiscent of Captain Quinlan in Orson Welles's TOUCH OF EVIL. Written by first-time screenwriter Robert Tannen and directed by Mark Rydell (ON GOLDEN POND, THE COWBOYS), EVEN MONEY is a complex drama with a fine cast, with Rydell bringing all the stories together in a wild finale. [More]
Starring: Kim Basinger, Danny DeVito, Kelsey Grammer, Nick Cannon
Starring: Kim Basinger, Danny DeVito, Kelsey Grammer, Nick Cannon, Ray Liotta, Forest Whitaker, Jay Mohr, Tim Roth, Carla Gugino
Director: Mark Rydell
Director: Mark Rydell
Screenwriter: Robert Tannen
Producer: Mark Rydell, Danny DeVito, Bob Yari, David S. Greenhouse
Composer: Dave Grusin
Studio: Yari Film Group
Reviews for Even Money
This crime drama doesn't push any envelopes but delivers a smart package to more demanding filmgoers.
Yeah, we know that gambling is bad. That doesn't mean one needs to make, let alone sit through, a poorly conceptualized movie to realize it.
So devoted to sustaining shock and awe that it doesn’t bother to offer clues about the causes and treatment of gambling addiction.
Hot on the heels of Lucky You, we have another movie about gambling addiction, and it's even less successful.
Lady Luck fails to shine on this floundering, cliche-filled cautionary tale.
Cleverly plotted, suspensefully structured, professionally acted and tightly written.
The problem with ensemble films, and this one in particular, is that they often flit instead of float between story arcs.
Strong character actors (Whitaker, DeVito, Tim Roth) crap out in vet helmer Mark Rydell's middling drama that can't decide if it's a pulpu crime noir or a moralistic piece about the evils of gambiling addiction.
Tethered to the standard multicharacter drama conventions that can be seen most nights on ABC, Even Money hardly delves beneath the surface of its moralistic overview of the sins and ramifications of gambling addiction.
A downer all the way, Even Money makes for dandy entertainment -- the perfect antidote to anything inspired by Hallmark that’s sent our way this year.
It's all so ham-fisted and clumsy, a movie whose agenda looms heavily over the proceedings.
Because of the 1985 Ryan O'Neal fiasco, Fever Pitch, Even Money doesn't have the distinction of being the worst film about gambling ever made. Then again, second place is also the first loser.
Shouldn't an overwrought drama about the life-shattering effects of gambling addiction make some effort, before delivering its moral, to show why people gamble in the first place?
Latest News for Even Money
May 17, 2007:
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