Croupier Movie Review
Croupier Review

"Croupier" Overview

Rating: R
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Mike HodgesProducer : Jonathan Cavendish,Christine Ruppert
Screenwiter : Paul Mayersberg
Starring : Clive Owen,Kate Hardie,Alex Kingston,Gina McKee,Nicholas Ball
Mike Hodges, best known for the lean and mean Get Carter (1971), returns to
form with Croupier. This polished throwback to the wit and economy of British
thrillers from the late '60s and early '70s certainly has style to spare, but
like its smooth operator protagonist, it lacks a soul.
Down on his luck novelist Jack Manfred (Clive Owen, handsome and angular as a
young Sean Connery) is forced to make ends meet by taking a job at a high
stakes casino. He's a croupier, or dealer, operating with cold precision. He
sizes up gamblers who line up as the roulette wheel to try their luck.
Croupier is fascinated with the seductive allure of poker chips on a table, the
dealer's nimble fingers making the cards dance in mystical shuffles. Jack is
unflappable as a dry martini when asking patrons to place their bets, brisk and
efficient at calling the hands. He's attractive in the way of people who do
what they like and do it very well. Everyone's gotta have a hobby.
Of course, Jack has slightly higher aspirations than being a card shark his
entire life. No, no -- he wants to write the great British novel. He uses his
life as a croupier as fodder for material, but this gets him in hot water when
a beautiful South African gambler (Alex Kingston) lures him into a plot to rob
the casino. It would make for a crackling yarn, but will his rock solid
principles allow him to take the plunge?
There's no time for audiences to figure out how ridiculous and contrived
Croupier is, moving at a tight clip. Hodges throws in plenty of sexual
tension, surrounding Jack with beautiful women whose good looks hide shrewd
intentions. The fetching Kingston is joined by Gina McKee (Wonderland) as
Jack's long-suffering security guard girlfriend who catches wise to his
schemes, and Kate Hardie (Mona Lisa) as a fellow croupier who proves, once and
for all, that bespectacled women can be sexy and dangerous.
If only Hodges had trusted his cinematography, elegant as a smoking jacket, and
the laser precise editing without relying on that old-school noir device of
heavy-handed voice-overs. Jack Manfred narrates his tale with smug
detachment. This grates on the nerves, providing information we already know
because we're seeing it unfold on the table.
Clive Owen looks terrific with his jet black hair and crisp tuxedos, born to
play this role, but he's such an impenetrable iceberg that we never really root
for him. While his charismatic screen presence is ever watchable, he lacks the
depth of Michael Caine in Get Carter. We could have used more of the comic
antics from Nicholas Ball as Jack's wily old dad, forever sneaking up on him
with duplicitous telephone calls.
Flawed as Croupier is, it atones by painting a seemingly accurate picture of
London high rollers. The club feels lived-in, populated with actors who have
memorably sneaky faces. Mike Hodges has always been particularly attuned to
the atmosphere of a room and the characters that inhabit the space. Far more
successful at the gambler's rush than Matt Damon's schoolboy lessons in
Rounders, Croupier is worth taking a chance on.
Dashing dealer.
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp





