I JUST SAW THE GREATEST GAMBLING MOVIE EVERY MADE! THE MOVIE IS CALLED OWNING MAHONEY, AND EVEN MY LAME WIFE, WHO HATES GAMBLING LOVED IT.

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THIS WONDERFUL FILM STARRING PHILIP HOFFMAN AND MINNIE DRIVER IS A TRUE STORY OF A DEGENERATE GAMBLER FROM TORONTO WHO EMBEZZLED OVER 20 MILLION FROM THE BANK THAT HE WORKED FOR ONLY TO BLOW THE MONEY IN LAS VEGAS AND ATLANTIC CITY. THIS MOVIE KEPT ME ON THE EDGE OF MY SEAT. ANYONE OUT THERE WHO LOVES GAMBLING, BUT WANT TO LEARN ABOUT HOW THIS ADDICTION CAN REALLY RUIN LIVES SHOULD SEE THIS RIVETING MOTION PICTURE! http://www.newsday.com/news/local/longisland/ny-lifman293355703jul02,0,1486672.story?coll=ny-linews-utility
 

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Already have this saved on my Netflix queue, but they haven't released it yet for renting ... I am definitely looking forward to it ...


Sony Pictures Classics presents a film directed by Richard Kwietniowski. Written by Maurice Chauvet. Rated R (for language and some sexuality). Running time: 107 minutes.

BY ROGER EBERT

"Owning Mahowny" is about a man seized helplessly with tunnel vision, in the kind of tunnel that has no light at either end. He is a gambler. Cut off temporarily by his bookie, he asks incredulously, "What am I supposed to do? Go out to the track and watch ?" Given the means to gamble, he gambles--thoughtless of the consequences, heedless of the risks, caught in the vise of a power greater than himself. Like all addictive gamblers, he seeks the sensation of losing more money than he can afford. To win a great deal before losing it all back again creates a kind of fascination: Such gamblers need to confirm over and over that they cannot win.

The film is based on the true story of a Toronto bank vice president who began by stealing exactly as much as he needed to clear his debts at the track ($10,300) and ended by taking his bank for $10.2 million. So intent is he on this process that he rarely raises his voice, or his eyes, from the task at hand. Philip Seymour Hoffman, that fearless poet of implosion, plays the role with a fierce integrity, never sending out signals for our sympathy because he knows that Mahowny is oblivious to our presence. Like an artist, an athlete or a mystic, Mahowny is alone within the practice of his discipline.

There have been many good movies about gambling, but never one that so single-mindedly shows the gambler at his task. Mahowny has just been rewarded at work with a promotion and a raise. He drives a clunker even the parking lot attendants kid him about. His suits amuse his clients. He is engaged to Lisa (Minnie Driver), a teller who is the very embodiment of a woman who might be really pretty if she took off those glasses and did something about her hair.

He is so absorbed in gambling that even his bookie (Maury Chaykin) tries to cut him off, to save himself the trouble of making threats to collect on the money Mahowny owes him. "I can't do business like this," the bookie complains, and at another point, when Mahowny is so rushed, he only has time to bet $1,000 on all the home teams in the National League and all the away teams in the American, the bookie finds this a breach of ethics: He is in business to separate the gambler from his money, yes, but his self-respect requires that the gambler to make reasonable bets.

When Mahowny moves up a step by stealing larger sums and flying to Atlantic City to lose them, he encounters a more ruthless and amusing professional. John Hurt plays the manager of the casino like a snake fascinated by the way a mouse hurries forward to be eaten. Hurt has seen obsessive gamblers come and go and is familiar with all the manifestations of their sickness, but this Mahowny brings a kind of grandeur to his losing.

The newcomer is quickly singled out as a high-roller, comped with a luxury suite, offered French cuisine and tickets to the Pointer Sisters, but all he wants to do is gamble ("and maybe ... some ribs, no sauce, and a Coke?"). Hurt sends a hooker to Mahowny's room, and a flunky reports back: "The only woman he's interested in is Lady Luck." Certainly Mahowny forgets his fiancee on a regular basis, standing her up, disappearing for weekends, even taking her to Vegas and then forgetting that she is upstairs waiting in their suite. (The fiancee is a classic enabler, excusing his lapses, but Vegas is too much for her; she tries to explain to him that when she saw the size of the suite she assumed they had come to Vegas to get married: "That's what normal people do in Vegas.")

It is impossible to like Mahowny but easy to identify with him, if we have ever had obsessions of our own. Like all addicts of anything, he does what he does because he does it. "He needs to win in order to get more money to lose," one of the casino professionals observes.

Of course he will eventually be caught. He knows it, we know it, but being caught is beside the point. The point is to gamble as long as he can before he is caught. Mahowny refers at one point to having had a lot of luck, and he is referring not to winning, but to being able to finance a great deal of gambling at a level so high that, asked by a psychiatrist to rate the excitement on a scale of zero to 100, he unhesitatingly answers, "100." And his greatest excitement in life outside of gambling? "20."

Philip Seymour Hoffman's performance is a masterpiece of discipline and precision. He hardly ever raises his head from the task at hand, or his voice from the detached reserve of a--well, of a bank functionary. He spends a lot of time adjusting his glasses or resting his fingers on his temples, as if to enhance his tunnel vision. He never meets the eye of the camera, or anyone else. Even when a casino security guard is firmly leading his fiancee away from his table, he hardly looks up to notice that she is there, or to say a word in his defense. He is ... gambling.

The movie has none of the false manipulation of most gambling movies, in which the actors signal their highs and lows. Hoffman understands that for this gambler, it is not winning or losing, but all process.
 

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Weekend: your link is definitely not about this movie
 

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This is atrue story. Did you watch it on TV or i theater?
 

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Sounds good, thanks for the heads up. Will try and rent it when it comes out.
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR> Already have this saved on my Netflix queue, but they haven't released it yet for renting ... <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Jazz what's the deal on that? You rent movies that way?
 

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Wonder if this is Dell Dude's screenplay he's been trying to write???
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I to am waiting for the DVD release on this one. Heard it is outstanding. PHILIP HOFFMAN is an outstanding actor. Check him out in Love Liza which is now out on DVD.
 

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I would also love to watch it.I`ve never watch Phillip Hoffman.
Guys just don`t quit gambling
 

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Buzzsaw: yes. www.netflix.com is a service at least available in the U.S. where you choose online which DVDs you want to rent, and as you do they get put in a queue which you can change. Depending on your particular plan (mine is 8 DVDs for $40/month), they ship in the mail the DVDs in the order they're in on your queue to you, and once you're done, you put them in the postage-paid mailer and drop it in your mailbox. So you can have up to 8 DVDs out at a given time - there are no late fees, you simply mail them back when done and when they receive it, they'll send you the next DVD in your queue. Due to the normal delay in mailing, I can get through about 20-24 DVDs in a month. Can't beat it - has the largest selection bar none - and no, I am NOT a shill for this service!
1036316054.gif
 

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thanks for your responses. I really think you guys will thank me after you see this wonderful film. sorry about the lame link, however, just go to google, and search reviews for this fine film, and you won't fine a poor one. Just trying to help,
weekend alki
 

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Why bother waiting for it to come out on DVD?

Download it on imesh!

you wouldn't believe what it there to download, T3 is already there!
 

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"Owning Mahowny" is about a man seized helplessly with tunnel vision, in the kind of tunnel that has no light at either end. He is a gambler."

typical dumbass, ignorant quote from miserable faggot roger ebert, "the type of tunnel that has no light on either end, a gambler", lend your ass to some call boy ebert and spare us the moronic rhetoric on gamblers.
 

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JackDee you are right on sir. Ebert is clueless in this area. He however, did rate the movie with high marks, and I think I was lucky to have seen it. This movie really would have been oscar nominated if it had more high profile actors. A must view for all RX patrons, and yes, even their wives and girlfriends.
 

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