Quattro ragazzi tentano la fortuna nel gioco d'azzardo ma si ritorvano fortmente indebitati con un boss locale. Disperati, decidono di derubare dei coltivatori di erba, ma le cose non andran... Leggi tuttoQuattro ragazzi tentano la fortuna nel gioco d'azzardo ma si ritorvano fortmente indebitati con un boss locale. Disperati, decidono di derubare dei coltivatori di erba, ma le cose non andranno nel modo stabilito.Quattro ragazzi tentano la fortuna nel gioco d'azzardo ma si ritorvano fortmente indebitati con un boss locale. Disperati, decidono di derubare dei coltivatori di erba, ma le cose non andranno nel modo stabilito.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Ha vinto 1 BAFTA Award
- 13 vittorie e 9 candidature totali
- Willie
- (as Charlie Forbes)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe film was dedicated to Lenny McLean, who played Barry the Baptist. He died of lung cancer exactly one month before the film's premiere. The dedication reads as follows: "In memory of LENNY McLEAN (The Guv'nor)"
- BlooperDuring the final round of the card game, Harry reveals his cards one by one. When he turns over his third and final card, Eddie looks shocked in a dramatic "forward tracking zoom out" shot, realizing how much he just lost. However, Eddie had already lost when Harry's second card was revealed (pair of sevens beat pair of sixes), it wouldn't matter what the third card was. So his shocked expression should have come earlier: after the second card's revelation, not the third.
- Citazioni
Bacon: What's that?
Samoan Joe's Barman: It's a cocktail. You asked for a cocktail.
Bacon: No. I asked you to give me a refreshing drink. I wasn't expecting a fucking rainforest! You could fall in love with an orangutan in that!
Samoan Joe's Barman: You want a pint, you go to the pub.
Bacon: I thought this was a pub!
Samoan Joes Barman: It's a Samoan pub.
- Curiosità sui creditiIn the closing credits, the character names in the cast list are shown entirely in lower-case letters with no initial capital letters.
- Versioni alternativeNew footage included in director's cut:
- at the very start of film, Ed is shown explaining the rules of 3 Card Brag to two people;
- the scene where Big Chris goes to see the man on the sunbed is longer
- Tom, Soap and Bacon are shown walking through the pub to the bar while Ed is playing cards
- the earlier stages of the card game are shown
- Alan explains to Ed the "history" between JD and Harry
- when Barry is talking to the two scousers the dialogue is different
- when Big Chris is walking into Harry's office near the end, he meets the man who was on the sunbed near the start of the film.
- when Ed is being interviewed by the police you see him finishing explaining the rules of 3 Card Brag to them (as seen at very start)
- just before the credits, you see Soap telling a whole joke in the car when they are coming back from the job
- three outtakes are shown during the credits: one with Soap telling a joke, the next where Barry asks one of the scouser's for an ice cream and one where a guy runs onto the set.
- Colonne sonoreHundred Mile City
Performed by Ocean Colour Scene (as Ocean Color Scene)
Courtesy of Universal Music (UK) Ltd.
Written by Damon Minchella, Simon Fowler, Oscar Harrison and Steve Cradock (as Steve Craddock)
© 1997 Island Music Ltd.
If I were to write and direct a movie about gangsters or crime, this would be it. I wouldn't change one damn thing. Not a thing. Everything in this film was, to my eye, perfect - casting, the camerawork, the excellent dialogue ("It's been emotional.")
Now I don't have much to compare this to, and I've heard some criticism that it basically draws quite heavily from older British crime dramas. I've got a bunch of these on my queue to rent, but I doubt you could make a crime film better than this.
This film oozes with style, class, dark humor, plot twists and turns, and doesn't drag one bit. The casting and characterization is perfect, and Ritchie isn't afraid to move the cameras around; no pretense is really made here at "realism" - Ritchie doesn't mask the fact that it's a film and he runs with it.
I really don't think of myself as easily impressed, and I have seen a hell of a lot of films in my time, but this one instantly made my Top 10 after only a single viewing. Yes, I'm raving about it, and while it may not be "spiritually enriching" or contain any deep sociological content (which I actually do look for in films), somehow it still scores as one hell of a film; memorable and entertaining, and stands up well to multiple viewings.
I am a bit dismayed to see some of the marketing of this film comparing it to other things like Quentin Tarantino films or Trainspotting. It really does it a disservice because this film really is its own phenomenon and stands on its own two feet; if anything it is similar to Trainspotting and Tarantino films only because it actually has its own bold style.
Can't recommend it enough.
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Juegos, trampas y dos pistolas humeantes
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 960.000 £ (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 3.753.929 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 143.321 USD
- 7 mar 1999
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 3.753.929 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 47 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1