The Gambler (1974) Movie Review
The Gambler (1974) Review
"The Gambler (1974)" Overview

Rating: R
1974
Cast and Crew
Director : Karel ReiszProducer : Robert Chartoff,Irwin Winkler
Screenwiter : James Toback
Starring : James Caan,Paul Sorvino,Lauren Hutton,Morris Carnovsky,Jacqueline Brookes,Burt Young
James Toback wrote this long-forgotten look at the gambling mind back in the
early 1970s, but it remains one of the most accurate and stirring portraits of
the betting mentality ever put to film.
James Caan owns the movie, as a vey charismatic English professor with a bad
gambling addiction -- he borrows money from his girlfriend (Lauren Hutton), his
mother, and the mob, and invariably he loses it all. Why play? Because of the
thrill. In one scene, when he doubles down on 18 during a game of blackjack
(for casino novices: this is absolute insanity), our antihero actually wins.
Eventually, though, even the best streak goes bust, and it's in Caan's darkest
hours that the movie shines the most.
Featuring a great supporting performance from Paul Sorvino (with hair!) as a
bookie, the film is to gambling what Days of Wine and Roses and The Lost
Weekend are to alcohol. His existential metaphors for life (drawn right from
the novels and poetry he teaches at school) are a masterful way to weave the
classics into a contemporary tale.
Too bad Hutton is less than impressive and the direction and soundtrack are
simply straightforward, leaving little impression. Good thing that Caan
doesn't need much else (aside from his 'fro) to carry the picture.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





