The Gambler (DVD REVIEW)
The
Gambler
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Wahlberg Remake of Mob Saga Arrives on DVD
By day, Jim Bennett (Mark
Wahlberg) is an English Literature professor whose questionable teaching method
involves berating his blasé students by suggesting that none of them will ever
amount to anything. He reserves all his praise for the only person in the class
exhibiting any promise as a writer, the brilliant and beautiful, but modest,
Amy Phillips (Brie Larson).
Amy also works part-time at
a gambling casino that her teacher just happens to frequent, since Jim is a
high-roller sorely in need of Gambler’s Anonymous. After all, the odds are
stacked way in favor of the house where, the longer you play, the more you
lose.
But Professor Bennett must
have flunked statistics, since he foolishly pushes his luck at Black Jack and
Roulette and proceeds to fritter away more than he could ever afford. Consequently,
he eventually finds himself in hock to the tune of a quarter-million dollars to
Mr. Lee (Alvin Ing), the exploitative casino owner who’d gladly extended a long
line of credit to the hopelessly compulsive gambler.
Given seven days to pay off
the I.O.U. before having his proverbial kneecaps broken by Lee’s goons, the
desperate debtor approaches everyone from his mom (Jessica Lange) to a ghetto
loan shark (Michael Kenneth Williams) to a well-heeled mobster (John Goodman)
for an emergency loan. Trouble is, rather than clearing his tab with the cash
he collects, Jim’s so controlled by his habit that he heads right back to the
casino tables.
Thus unfolds The Gambler, a
riveting remake loosely based on the 1974 classic starring James Caan. Trim and
impassioned, Mark Wahlberg handles the title role in this witty, gritty
overhaul of the original relying upon a well-crafted screenplay by Oscar-winner
William Monahan (for The Departed).
The cautionary tale
basically chronicles the gradual glide into depravity of an unrepentant loser
in denial. During that frightening tailspin, Jim is enabled by several of his
students, including flattered love interest Amy, basketball All-American Lamar
(Anthony Kelley) and promising tennis prodigy Dexter (Emory Cohen). The only
question is whether the pathetic prof will be able to pull out of the spiral
before crashing and burning.
This searing character
study unfolds against a variety of visually-captivating L.A. locales ranging from the seamy to the
posh, and is underscored by an appropriately-gritty soundtrack. Director Rupert
Wyatt’s (Rise of the Planet of the Apes) job was ostensibly made that much
easier by the A-list supporting cast featuring Oscar-winners George Kennedy
(for Cool Hand Luke) and Jessica Lange (for Tootsie and Blue Sky), as well as
veteran thespians John Goodman, Leland Orser and Michael Kenneth Williams.
If only the
self-destructive protagonist were a sympathetic soul instead of a real lout
you’d rather root against than for.
Very Good (3 stars)
Rated
R for sexuality, nudity, and pervasive profanity
Running
time: 110 minutes
Distributor:
Paramount Home Media Distribution
To
order The Gambler on Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack Extras: Mr. Self Destruct: Inside
the Gambler; Dark before Dawn: The Descent of The Gambler; Changing the Game:
Adaptation; in the City: Locations; Dressing the Players: Costume Design; deleted
scenes; and extended scenes.
To
see a trailer for The Gambler, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiiaoUnkMvQ
To
order The Gambler on Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack, visit:
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