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IMDbPro

Casino Jack

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Kevin Spacey in Casino Jack (2010)
Kevin Spacey gives the performance of a lifetime as Jack Abramoff, a man seduced by greed whose illegal schemes spin wildly out of control.
Play trailer2:09
14 Videos
83 Photos
Dark ComedyTrue CrimeBiographyComedyCrimeDrama

A hot shot Washington DC lobbyist and his protégé go down hard as their schemes to peddle influence lead to corruption and murder.A hot shot Washington DC lobbyist and his protégé go down hard as their schemes to peddle influence lead to corruption and murder.A hot shot Washington DC lobbyist and his protégé go down hard as their schemes to peddle influence lead to corruption and murder.

  • Director
    • George Hickenlooper
  • Writer
    • Norman Snider
  • Stars
    • Kevin Spacey
    • Barry Pepper
    • Jon Lovitz
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Hickenlooper
    • Writer
      • Norman Snider
    • Stars
      • Kevin Spacey
      • Barry Pepper
      • Jon Lovitz
    • 59User reviews
    • 113Critic reviews
    • 51Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos14

    Casino Jack - New Trailer
    Trailer 2:09
    Casino Jack - New Trailer
    Casino Jack
    Trailer 1:34
    Casino Jack
    Casino Jack
    Trailer 1:34
    Casino Jack
    Casino Jack
    Trailer 1:35
    Casino Jack
    "Jack's Mirror Dialogue"
    Clip 1:39
    "Jack's Mirror Dialogue"
    "All Cash Business"
    Clip 0:45
    "All Cash Business"
    "Tom Confronts Jack"
    Clip 1:22
    "Tom Confronts Jack"

    Photos83

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    Top cast75

    Edit
    Kevin Spacey
    Kevin Spacey
    • Jack Abramoff
    Barry Pepper
    Barry Pepper
    • Michael Scanlon
    Jon Lovitz
    Jon Lovitz
    • Adam Kidan
    Ruth Marshall
    Ruth Marshall
    • Susan Schmidt
    Graham Greene
    Graham Greene
    • Bernie Sprague
    Hannah Endicott-Douglas
    Hannah Endicott-Douglas
    • Sarah Abramoff
    John Robinson
    • Federal Agent Patterson
    Jason Weinberg
    Jason Weinberg
    • Snake
    Spencer Garrett
    Spencer Garrett
    • Tom DeLay
    Yok Come Ho
    • Asian Factory Worker
    Anna Hardwick
    Anna Hardwick
    • Lobbyist #2
    John David Whalen
    • Kevin Ring
    Matt Gordon
    Matt Gordon
    • Bill
    Jeffrey R. Smith
    Jeffrey R. Smith
    • Grover Norquist
    Christian Campbell
    Christian Campbell
    • Ralph Reed
    Eric Schweig
    Eric Schweig
    • Chief Poncho
    Xenia Siamas
    Xenia Siamas
    • Flight Attendant (St. Andrews)
    Jeff Pustil
    • Bob Ney
    • Director
      • George Hickenlooper
    • Writer
      • Norman Snider
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews59

    6.218K
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    Featured reviews

    6perkypops

    An engrossing real life drama

    The most awful thing about Casino Jack is knowing it is true, knowing all the good people being fleeced, taken for a ride, are real, knowing that the central theme of this story is alive, kicking and fuelled for take-off even now.

    As a dramatisation it works because we do not have to dwell on the complexity of the deals being set up, who is ripping off who, who is the biggest liar. The film's smart pace allows us to soak up the facts like ink on blotting paper and at our own pace.

    Thankfully we can lose ourselves in the characters, all of whom are played to perfection by a very strong cast, and all of whom resonate to the people we see and hear about on TV, in the media, even in show business. These are the folk who have more money than sense, or, more accurately, more credit and no shame if they can get away with making huge profits immorally. Less appealing are the players in real life who really are being torn apart through their desperation for attention, for expressions of interest, where any interest may be better than nothing. In this area we are left to feel morally lacking for not doing more to stop this kind of stuff. But the story simply keeps rolling along and we witness the demise of the main characters Abramoff (Spacey) and Scanlon (Pepper) just as it happened in real life.

    The opening of the movie sets the scene well into the plot where much of the twisting and double crossing has already begun to unravel. Then we are witness to the events as they unfold through the deals, the double crosses, and the nasty side of greed (is there a nice side?). As the credits roll we also see a couple of the real life events depicted in the movie played back to us, to allow us to judge authenticity. I wonder if this was the only mistake the film makes. I felt the film spoke for itself.

    As distressing and disturbing as the film's subject should be it is played out in such a way as we are information and knowledge gathering much like a media warning about "this is what lobbying really is". It is also a shrewd warning as to how shameless and immoral some people are when they are saying nice things to you, as if we needed a warning! I found it worthwhile to research the subject of lobbying a little more after I had seen this film and found myself disbelieving some of the things I have found out. This alone convinced me the film does not pull any punches.

    Watch it just to wise up. Fortunately it is acted so powerfully and so sharply you will not want to look away.
    7lee_eisenberg

    Corruption rules!

    George Hickenlooper's final film - he died a few weeks before the release - focuses on super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff and his involvement in a corruption scandal that brought down some White House staffers and congress members. "Casino Jack" isn't quite as good as Alex Gibney's documentary "Casino Jack and the United States of Money" but certainly kept my attention every step of the way, just seeing how far Abramoff's reach extended, and how intricate the scandal was.

    Kevin Spacey, playing the disgraced lobbyist, shows him to be a slick-talking dude who essentially believes that he's doing the right thing by turning the US government into an ATM for the highest bidder. Meanwhile, he overcharges his Indian clients and helps keep a Mariana Islands sweatshop open. And it extends way beyond that! The look at Abramoff's family life is a little less engrossing. It's clear that his obsession with money has clouded his mind and he's living beyond his means, but it doesn't pack the same punch that the far-reaching scandals do.

    So, it's certainly an interesting movie to watch, just to see to what extent Abramoff's deeds turned the government into a bastion of corruption, but it's definitely not as good as it could have been.

    Also starring Kelly Preston, Rachelle Lefevre, Barry Pepper, Jon Lovitz, Graham Greene, Maury Chaykin, Christian Campbell and Spencer Garrett.

    PS: At the Golden Globes in early 2006, in the wake of Abramoff's conviction, Ben Stiller said "Why would the parents name their son Jack when the last name ends in 'off'?"
    5scrapmetal7

    Typical HBO style docudrama.

    Movies like this, Spinning Boris, Barbarians at the Gate, Recount, bla bla bla... A lot of the reviewers on this board are treating this like a real movie and complaining about the style, the pacing, the acting, or whatever. They don't realize that the HBO docudrama is a genre of its own, and they all are directed like this, and have this kind of music and structure and pacing and so on. If you've seen one, you've seen them all. They are fakey, boringly executed accounts of real things that happened, they feel like they take a million years to watch, and they really only appeal to people the first time they see one.

    Republican culture is full of sleazy, cynical con artists with big dreams that hinge on manipulating people and ripping them off. This movie is about two such men, Jack Abramoff and Mike Scanlon, and they are worthless people that no one with a soul can empathize with or relate to at all. Watching them make their plans and cheat people and be disloyal to their friends and lovers is boring. there's no entertainment value to it.

    In movies like this it is important for the screenwriters to feel that they've painted their main character as an irascible, charismatic character, rascally and witty, full of little zinger lines and whatnot. The real Jack Abramoff seems to be a boring douchebag, and he probably did constantly do impressions of celebrities, but I doubt he was as interesting to watch as Kevin Spacey (who is not interesting enough to save this movie).
    6rmax304823

    Lessons in Self Justification.

    I had a difficult time dealing with this movie, partly because the entire system of lobbying is so despicable in itself, and partly because the writer has done his best to show Jack Abramoff as a fundamentally nice guy who just overreached a little and got caught.

    I mean, right at the beginning, after we see Kevin Spacey (superb) talking to himself in a mirror, we hear his explanation of why lobbyists exist. Because they're useful. They give legislators information about subjects the legislators need to know something about in order to do their jobs.

    That explanation comes straight out of a now unfashionable school of sociological thought called functionalism. If something exists in a society, it's there for a good reason. Otherwise it wouldn't be there, right? Whores make the streets safe for our wives and children. The Mafia fills in the gaps that the police force can't, and it meets a market demand among consumers of illegal goods. Mass murderers and psychopaths provide us with bad examples that we can point out to our kids so they'll know what not to become.

    According to the film, Abramoff just did was everyone else was doing. He only had the misfortune of being caught. Nobody argues that perhaps congressional aides or interns ought to be doing the research instead of paid lobbyists. No explanation is offered for why spending on lobbyists more than doubled between 2000 and 2009.

    There are no such reality intrusions. Abramoff is a colorful, funny, very active guy. He works out. He loves his family. He knows everyone. He's religious. He opens a kosher restaurant on K Street and plans to open a Hebrew school.

    A second reason I found it hard to assess the movie is that I didn't understand it because I'm too dumb. I couldn't follow all the shenanigans. Okay. In one of his minor deals, towards the beginning, the Chippewa tribe, among whom I once lived as a cultural anthropologist, gave him millions of dollars and the money apparently disappeared. Where? I don't know. I told you I was dumb. I don't know what an expression like "he wants ten percent under the table" means. I don't know why a Greek was killed. I don't know why Jon Lovitz got stabbed with a ball point pen. Tom DeLay has a prominent role and I don't know what he did that was supposed to be bad. Abramoff makes some venomous remark about George W. Bush at the end and I don't know why. And I can hardly credit the notion that Mike Scanlon's (Barry Pepper, with a great twisted face) girl friend dropped the dime on all these enterprises because she found a pair of red alien panties in her boy friend's laundry. It's the kind of movie that someone as stupid as I am needs a little preparation for -- a few hours of studying with a book called "Lobbying for Dummies" or something.

    Because except for the murder I couldn't identify a single illegal act in the entire movie. Lobbyists give money to politicians and the politicians do favors in return. It sounds a lot like bribery to me, and I know THAT'S illegal, or at least I think it is, but I don't know why, when it takes one form, it's called "lobbying" and is as kosher as Abramoff's restaurant that serves the best roast beef in the city, and why, when it takes another form, it's called "bribery" and you go to jail.

    I do, however, recognize a decent performance when I see one, and three performances are stand outs in this production. Kevin Spacey, a little older and chubbier, gets to do some of his impersonations -- Clinton, Al Pacino, and a few others, and he's good. Barry Pepper as Scanlon is terrific as well, as the emotionally unstable squeal cat. And Jon Lovitz is funny, no matter whether the part calls for a comic presentation or not. He's hilarious in some scenes, which I won't spell out.

    Not a masterpiece by any means -- "Barbarians At The Gates" is about leveraged buy outs and it's better -- but worth seeing once. I hope you have better luck in decoding the events than I did.
    8intelearts

    My 348th Review: You couldn't make this stuff up if you tried -blackest political comedy of the year

    Both gobsmakingingly awesome in its (true) take on Washington and just way OTT look at the Beltway, CJ is just so good. Honestly, if this had been made as fiction you'd shoot it down as implausible - the stink goes how high? - but here we see lobbyist and senators in cahoots to get the dollar in their pocket at the expense of just about every body else.

    Spacey is in fine form, with a sterling support cast, and the film is best viewed as a buckle up and grin fair ride to the underbelly of politics - it really is so way beyond your standard black comedy or satire that it's just jaw dropping.

    We enjoyed CJ - it doesn't aim to be a political thriller or have any great message but it is a lot of black comedy and seriously messed-up situations from beginning to end.....

    Have fun now.....

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The real-life Susan Schmidt played Jack's secretary in this movie.
    • Goofs
      When Michael Scanlon drives up to the SunSail cruise ship in Florida to see Gus Boulis, the front of his rental car has a Florida license plate. Additionally, another car appears with a Florida license on the front. License plates for automobiles are printed on one tag only and must be placed on the rear of the vehicle. Only commercial tractor trucks carry Florida plates on the front.
    • Quotes

      Jack Abramoff: Washington is like Hollywood, but with uglier faces.

    • Crazy credits
      Brief footage of the real Jack Abramoff's introduction speech of Tom DeLay is shown during the end credits.
    • Connections
      Featured in Conan: A Quantum of Kwanzaa (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Ballade No. 1, Op 23
      Written by Frédéric Chopin

      Performed by Andrew Burashko

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Casino Jack?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 7, 2011 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Official sites
      • Iwin68
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bagman
    • Filming locations
      • Mardi Gras Casino, Hollywood, Florida, USA
    • Production companies
      • An Olive Branch Productions
      • Bagman (2009)
      • Cinematic Labs
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $12,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,042,959
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $34,528
      • Dec 19, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,230,933
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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