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Owning Mahowny

  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
16K
YOUR RATING
Minnie Driver, Philip Seymour Hoffman, and John Hurt in Owning Mahowny (2003)
Theatrical Trailer from Sony Pictures Classics
Play trailer1:53
7 Videos
13 Photos
True CrimeCrimeDramaThriller

A bank manager with: (a) a gambling problem and (b) access to a multimillion dollar account gets into a messy situation. Based on the story of the largest one-man bank fraud in Canadian hist... Read allA bank manager with: (a) a gambling problem and (b) access to a multimillion dollar account gets into a messy situation. Based on the story of the largest one-man bank fraud in Canadian history.A bank manager with: (a) a gambling problem and (b) access to a multimillion dollar account gets into a messy situation. Based on the story of the largest one-man bank fraud in Canadian history.

  • Director
    • Richard Kwietniowski
  • Writers
    • Gary Stephen Ross
    • Maurice Chauvet
  • Stars
    • Philip Seymour Hoffman
    • Minnie Driver
    • John Hurt
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    16K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Kwietniowski
    • Writers
      • Gary Stephen Ross
      • Maurice Chauvet
    • Stars
      • Philip Seymour Hoffman
      • Minnie Driver
      • John Hurt
    • 96User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos7

    Owning Mahowny
    Trailer 1:53
    Owning Mahowny
    Owning Mahowny
    Trailer 2:00
    Owning Mahowny
    Owning Mahowny
    Trailer 2:00
    Owning Mahowny
    Owning Mahowny Scene: I'm Having A Bad Run
    Clip 2:55
    Owning Mahowny Scene: I'm Having A Bad Run
    Owning Mahowny Scene: One Good Weekend
    Clip 2:28
    Owning Mahowny Scene: One Good Weekend
    Owning Mahowny Scene: A New Room Key
    Clip 2:26
    Owning Mahowny Scene: A New Room Key
    Owning Mahowny Scene: He's Bust The Table
    Clip 3:11
    Owning Mahowny Scene: He's Bust The Table

    Photos13

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    Top cast64

    Edit
    Philip Seymour Hoffman
    Philip Seymour Hoffman
    • Dan Mahowny
    Minnie Driver
    Minnie Driver
    • Belinda
    John Hurt
    John Hurt
    • Victor Foss
    Maury Chaykin
    Maury Chaykin
    • Frank Perlin
    Ian Tracey
    Ian Tracey
    • Det. Ben Lock
    Sonja Smits
    Sonja Smits
    • Dana Selkirk
    K.C. Collins
    K.C. Collins
    • Bernie
    • (as Chris Collins)
    Jason Blicker
    Jason Blicker
    • Dave Quinson
    Vince Corazza
    Vince Corazza
    • Doug
    • (as Vincent Corazza)
    Roger Dunn
    Roger Dunn
    • Bill Gooden
    Eric Fink
    • Psychologist
    Mike 'Nug' Nahrgang
    Mike 'Nug' Nahrgang
    • Parking Attendant
    Tanya Henley
    • Teller
    Brona Brown
    • Teller
    Philip Craig
    Philip Craig
    • Briggs
    Michael Caruana
    Michael Caruana
    • Alex Retsnor
    Gary Brennan
    Gary Brennan
    • Man in Ice Rink
    Matthew Ferguson
    Matthew Ferguson
    • Martin
    • Director
      • Richard Kwietniowski
    • Writers
      • Gary Stephen Ross
      • Maurice Chauvet
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews96

    7.015.7K
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    Featured reviews

    Buddy-51

    sad and haunting

    `Some folks believe that everyone has a public life, a private life and a secret life.'

    These are the opening words of `Owning Mahowny,' a fascinating real-life tale of a compulsive gambler whose life falls to pieces when he begins embezzling funds from the bank where he works in order to feed his obsession. Dan Mahowny's `secret life' became public in the early 1980's when he was finally arrested and convicted on charges of bank theft. Philip Seymour Hoffman, who has made a career out of playing sad sack, tormented souls, gives one of his richest performances to date as Mahowny, a mild-mannered man caught in the grip of that compulsive sickness known as gambling addiction. Minnie Driver plays his devoted girlfriend who loves Dan dearly but who cannot bear to stand by and watch helplessly as he slowly but inexorably destroys his life.

    If the film were only about Mahowny's gambling problem, it would be no different from countless TV movies made on the same subject. What sets this film apart is the way in which writer Maurice Chauvet (working off the original novel by Gary Stephen Ross) and director Richard Kwietniowski make the background of the story as compelling as the foreground. The astute, observant script focuses as much on the ins and outs of the casino and gambling worlds as it does on the personal travails of its main character. Particularly intriguing is the way in which high rollers are followed and coddled by the casino owners using both high tech equipment like cameras and monitors as well as plain old-fashioned flattery, obsequiousness and deceit. John Hurt, in a brilliant performance, plays a smarmy casino operator in Atlantic City who will stop at nothing to make Mahowny feel at home in his establishment – all for the purpose of having his new found `friend' gamble away a fortune at his tables, of course. The film is, in fact, filled with interesting side characters, including a sympathetic bellhop, who befriends Dan and who tries to convince him to leave the casino he happens to work for; several of the petty loan sharks with whom Dan finds himself inextricably connected; and a whole host of law enforcement officials whose job it is to bring Dan in on grand theft felony charges.

    The filmmakers have taken a laid back, subtle approach to their material. They allow the story to develop slowly, offering us the chance to get to know Mahowny and his world at an unhurried, leisurely pace. Since Mahowny is, himself, such a secretive, quiet character, it is appropriate that the film that bears his name should also reflect that quality of muted sadness in its pacing and tone. Towards the end, however, once the authorities begin moving in for the kill and we sense the inevitable grip of Fate tightening around this strangely likable character, the film becomes both highly suspenseful and immensely moving at one and the same time. What's fascinating is that we are always one step ahead of Mahowny in our understanding of what is about to befall him. As in all great tragedies, it is the Cassandra-like burden placed on the audience – that of being able to see the future with no hope of doing anything to prevent it – that gives the film its air of pervasive sadness.

    `Owning Mahowny' is a beautifully written, directed and acted film that opens up for us a strange and fascinating world.
    8andy902

    Intense! Brilliantly Acted.

    Phillip Seymour Hoffman is without a doubt the best independent actor making movies today. I first fell for him when he played the Jaw Dropping low life shady character Allen in Happiness, and since then his career has only gotten brighter (or darker?). He personifies "creep", and in roles like the mattress man from Punch Drunk Love, I find myself wanting to reach through the screen and strangle him. Of course, he does it again in Owning Mahoney as Dan Mahoney a young assistant manager at a Toronto bank who uses other people's funds to repay debts and feed his gambling addiction. My dissatisfaction rises as he becomes more audacious and gambles away more and more of his misbegotten cash. You will find yourself yelling "QUIT NOW!!" at the screen, but his only reply will be "but i just got here". Dan Mahoney is possibly the simplest and most complex character I've seen Hoffman tackle. Is it the love of gambling that drives him to play $70,000 hands?? No, his facial expressions don't change from when he's up 9 million, to when he's gambled away his last $500 chip. His addiction has no purpose, it's almost as if he is doing this simply to survive. Hoffman wasn't the only gem in this picture, he was coupled with Minnie Driver who was almost unidentifiable with her dark rimmed glasses and bleached blonde hair (and not a bad Canadian accent eh?). It's too bad this film will probably only be seen by true independent film/Hoffman fans because it's intense and gripping. A slice of someone's life destroyed by addiction, this is a must see!
    8=G=

    All Hoffman

    "Owning Mahoney" tells of a bank account manager and pathological gambler who lives from one wager to the next on a collision course with oblivion. A powerful and compelling tour de force by Hoffman - who once again proves he ranks among the actor's actors with the likes of Brando, Pacino, and Nicholson - this engrossing film claims to be a true story of a man, money, and an obsession of remarkable proportions. A worthwhile watch for Hoffman fans and anyone into character studies, particularly of obsessive-compulsive types. All others stay away. (A-)
    6glgioia

    Engaging 'true crime' tale

    Interesting examination of a young Canadian bank executive who embezzles money to feed an insatiable gambling addiction.

    Hoffman gives a yeoman's if not overly subdued performance as Dan Mahowny, and the film for the most part is a better than average watch. Strangely, the film plops you right into chapter 5 or thereabouts, and your left wondering who is this guy for the entire film. The motivation for Mahowny's odd behavior is never really broached. The film starts with Mahowny sports betting and playing for the usual small stakes, he then mysteriously falls off a cliff in his wagering amounts and we're supposed to swallow that it all stemmed off of a 10000 obligation? Then we're off to the races as he becomes this casino legend. Needed a little more development, and thats being kind.

    The direction is clever, in particular the ironic use of scenes showing the symbiotic relationship of bank and casino. On the nay side, the small budget generates the expected technical issues, most glaringly, never once providing camera-work that remotely convinces you he's in either Vegas or Atlantic City. The casino interior shots aren't properly done to eliminate the claustrophobic soundstagitis, and the only exterior shots found in the entire movie, are blatantly in Canada. As example, there is a scene where Mahowny is contemplating life while standing on the beach of the Atlantic Ocean. Its so obviously a lake or even pond and not the ocean, that its borderline embarrassing. Finally John Hurt, who i really like, is given liberty to really ham it overboard. But believe it or not, I genuinely like this film, and do recommend it.

    PS/ I don't care that what anyone says, the woman who hits him up for 100 bux in the casino is Sandra Oh.
    RResende

    just a few more minutes, lights off

    This is a pretty safe and unremarkable project in many regards. The story is appealing as a sort of funny anti-hero, a resourceful guy with an uncontrolled urge to gamble. He steals so he can feed is habit, and everybody around him has money-related interests except himself. It's made more interesting to follow because it's based on a real story, and apparently it follows it quite closely.

    Technically it's as good as most of Hollywood makes, competent in every aspect except direction, which is flat and dead. No defined camera stance, merely the basic representation of what's happening.

    But nothing of that matters because who the camera frames almost always is the late Seymour Hoffman. And that is more than enough. Every movement counts, every restrained facial sign shows something. He was really a method student, but i suspect he didn't have to search very deep to get to his characters. His most remarkable characters all live in their own world, tormented by uncontrolled urges, in pain by maladjustment to an unforgiving unfit world. His pain was real in every character of his, he just channeled it each time to a different character, to a different world, to a different misfit quirky corner of the world.

    It's an extra pain to watch each one of his movies now, when we know we won't see anything new from him ever again, and we understand that not so much of what he showed us was acting, faking on a stage, but instead was the masking of a real pain. Or it could be the other way around. It could be that, in a tragic sense, the high standard that Hoffman proposed for his own craft drained and exhausted the real man so much that he was left in the limbo between his full creations and the emptiness of the somehow unfulfilled real life, whatever that might be.

    It's not difficult to watch this film now, and map the gambling urge of Mahowny to the addictions of Hoffman in the real life, and understand that the "just a few more minutes" could in fact be the few more minutes he always requested from himself.

    watch this, the film won't change you, but Philip S. Hoffman will.

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    Related interests

    Lee Norris and Ciara Moriarty in Zodiac (2007)
    True Crime
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The real person, on which the character of Dan Mahowny is based, is now a consultant for a company that investigates fraud.
    • Goofs
      In the scenes where several yellow Metro Toronto Police cars appear together, at least three different shades of yellow paint are visible. (The police changed to white and blue cars a few years after the period of the movie because the yellow paint they'd been using was withdrawn; presumably the filmmakers could not find enough cars of the right shade.)
    • Quotes

      Psychologist: How would you rate the thrill you got from gambling, on a scale of one to 100?

      Dan Mahowny: Um... hundred.

      Psychologist: And what about the biggest thrill you've ever had outside of gambling?

      Dan Mahowny: Twenty.

      Psychologist: Twenty. How do you feel about living the rest of your life with a max of twenty?

      Dan Mahowny: Ok. Twenty's ok.

    • Crazy credits
      At the end of the closing credits you'll see the strongroom door from the start again and hear the sound of the ball in a roulette wheel. Rien ne vas plus.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Best Films of 2003 (2004)

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 25, 2003 (Argentina)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Одержимий
    • Filming locations
      • Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Alliance Atlantis Communications
      • Astral Media
      • Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit (CPTC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $10,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,011,871
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $33,287
      • May 4, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,271,244
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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