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The Killing of a Chinese Bookie

  • 1976
  • R
  • 2h 15m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,2/10
16 k
MA NOTE
Ben Gazzara in The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976)
Trailer for this film from John Cassavetes
Liretrailer2:01
1 vidéo
76 photos
CriminalitéDrameThrillerDrame psychologiqueGangster

Lorsque sa dépendance au jeu le crible de dettes et ne lui offre qu'une alternative, un fier propriétaire de club de strip-tease est obligé de se réconcilier avec lui-même en tant qu'homme.Lorsque sa dépendance au jeu le crible de dettes et ne lui offre qu'une alternative, un fier propriétaire de club de strip-tease est obligé de se réconcilier avec lui-même en tant qu'homme.Lorsque sa dépendance au jeu le crible de dettes et ne lui offre qu'une alternative, un fier propriétaire de club de strip-tease est obligé de se réconcilier avec lui-même en tant qu'homme.

  • Director
    • John Cassavetes
  • Writer
    • John Cassavetes
  • Stars
    • Ben Gazzara
    • Timothy Carey
    • Seymour Cassel
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,2/10
    16 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • John Cassavetes
    • Writer
      • John Cassavetes
    • Stars
      • Ben Gazzara
      • Timothy Carey
      • Seymour Cassel
    • 92Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 51Commentaires de critiques
    • 65Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    The Killing of a Chinese Bookie
    Trailer 2:01
    The Killing of a Chinese Bookie

    Photos76

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    Rôles principaux41

    Modifier
    Ben Gazzara
    Ben Gazzara
    • Cosmo Vittelli
    Timothy Carey
    Timothy Carey
    • Flo
    • (as Timothy Agoglia Carey)
    Seymour Cassel
    Seymour Cassel
    • Mort Weil
    Robert Phillips
    Robert Phillips
    • Phil
    Morgan Woodward
    Morgan Woodward
    • The Boss
    John Kullers
    • The Accountant
    • (as John Red Kullers)
    Al Ruban
    • Marty Reitz
    Azizi Johari
    • Rachel
    Virginia Carrington
    • Mama
    Meade Roberts
    • Mr. Sophistication
    Alice Friedland
    • Sherry
    Donna Gordon
    • Margo Donnar
    • (as Donna Marie Gordon)
    Haji
    • Haji
    Carol Warren
    • Carol
    Kathalina Veniero
    • Annie
    Yvette Morris
    • Yvette
    Jack Ackerman
    • Musical Director
    David Rowlands
    David Rowlands
    • Lamarr
    • Director
      • John Cassavetes
    • Writer
      • John Cassavetes
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs92

    7,215.7K
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    Avis en vedette

    chaos-rampant

    Cassavetes: Meditations on the original face II

    One of the most stimulating relaxations I know is simply floating on water. The good thing in living a short walk from the beach is that I get to do this every other day of nearly half the year. It's great at dusk, whereby the sea is not some abstract volume but the specific sensation of upfloat, and the early moon is that rock over there from me. Tangible moments of world, encompassing what the Chinese call the tao.

    No film even compares to the feeling, certainly no piffle Koyannisqatsi. But a few filmmakers come close to this totality as something felt. Cinema is nothing in a large sense, that is until a certain point where it becomes a most powerful tool for enlightenment. Cassavetes is one of those guys, and knows just how to use it.

    So I revisited this after many years as part of my Cassavetes series, this time watching the extended version. The shorter one may be tighter, more focused, but I'll always opt for a longer stay in his world.

    The film is the perfect summer night movie, one to watch with the distant sound of motor noise flowing through open windows. Cassavetes loves the night, the neon signs, the sound of traffic, the hubbub of the nightclub, the brushing of people in close spaces. The film is full of extremely memorable spaces, years later I could recall Cosmo standing in the entrance of his club, the backalley where he's beaten up, the empty highway, the phonebooth in the middle of nowhere, running from the Chinaman's house.

    Here, Cassavetes stretches two things. The existential noir where desire, not even so much for poker money, the desire it seems to look comfortable in front of people, summons the noir darkness. Usually in a noir, from that point we get some hallucinative fooling with the narration, here completely merged with the flow of things. The murky proposal for the kill in the cramped car, nothing telegraphed. The subtle menace and helplessness around the gangsters. The foreshadowing bang of the flat tire. The inescapable framing where he was the stooge of fate all along.

    And a more gentle self-reference, where Cosmo, standing for Cassavetes, gambles with money-people and loses. These mafia executives want from him a straightforward movie that ends with a killing, the simplest stuff, which he grudgingly delivers. The starkest contrast from the fancy, lively improvisation going on in his club, that both reflects and ribs at Cassavetes' own stuff. He does it his way of course, with fumbling, confusion and uncertainty. And still succeeds. Only The Long Goodbye rivals it in the crime sweepstakes of the 70s, no doubt inspired by this.

    Here, because of the adoption of genre with its clear horizon, the tethers are easier than previous Cassavetes films. Oh there is the anxiety, but that is part and parcel of the greater life. More than any of his films though, it achieves that sublime floating sense that encompasses a concrete totality.

    His camera excites me like no one else's. Antonioni adopts the transcendent position. Tarkovsky the one of flowing mind. Cassavetes adopts the position of tentative coming-into-being, his visual space has a thick and viscous quality, it has time, it has a tangible and floating gravity, all things coming to be and vanishing again in a cosmic vitality.

    Cosmo, a man of cosmic vitality. All through the gangster stuff, Cosmo keeps worrying about the show and the club. Because the show and the atmosphere around his club are of the soul of this man, the images and living space worth living for—dreamy and spontaneous, scented air, a little sloppy because it is re-discovered each night. But that is as much a role, the entrepreneur, as that of the killer, the gambler, the suave playboy, masks for the night. Not the original face.

    Deep down I get the sense of a weary joy that runs deeper than happiness, a mono no aware.

    Something to meditate upon.
    Infofreak

    Absolutely unforgettable!

    'The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie' is one of the most interesting and original movies I've ever seen. I would include it with movies such as 'Blow Up', 'Performance' and 'Eraserhead', which may not have much to do with each other on the surface, but are what I would call puzzlers. On first viewing you go "well, it was different... I'm not sure if I LIKED it, but it sure was original..." Then later you find yourself haunted by it. You go back and watch it again and again, and each time you discover some nuance or emotion or idea, or a certain scene or line that resonates. These movies are ones that STAY with you.

    The plot of 'Bookie' is pretty straightforward. A strip club owner gets into debt with the Mob and is pressured into murdering a bookie. Other directors such as Scorsese or Frankenheimer or Friedkin or Mann could have made an tight, exciting thriller out of such a plot. But John Cassavetes goes for a completely different approach, and doesn't play by "the rules". He ignores the obvious way of proceeding, slows things down, focuses on characters and relationships and moments, and ends up with a cinematic poem.

    That may sound pretentious to some, so be it, but that's what it is. The beauty of the photography combined with the improvised dialogue by some of the best character actors of American post-War movies (Gazzara, Cassel, Carey), makes this movie unique. There's nothing quite like this movie, and it's one that if you sit back and just let it do its thing, will remain absolutely unforgettable.

    One of the 1970s greatest achievements.
    9KatMiss

    A WONDERFULLY MADE FILM!

    A film like John Cassavetes' "The Killing of A Chinese Bookie" is one of those films that Roger Ebert often says "either grabs you or leaves you". This one grabbed me. It is perhaps the least liked film of the precious few Cassavetes wrote and directed, but it's an honest film that doesn't pull any punches. It's kind of a predecessor to "Goodfellas" and "Casino".

    While Cassavetes' film lacks the polish of the two Scorsese films, I think that benefits "Killing". This is not a glossy, "high-concept" film that Hollywood prefers (although Scorsese is certainly not "high-concept"); it is a rough, confusing muddle and that is probably one of the reasons the film remains highly unseen by a great many people. However, I like rough, confusing films and one of the great pleasures is trying to figure everything out. The beauty of a John Cassavetes film is that there are no easy answers and he likes you to make your own reading on the film.

    As always with a Cassavetes film, he gives juicy parts to his regulars. Ben Gazzara is excellent as Cosmo Vitelli, the nightclub owner who needs to perform the title deed to save his club. Seymour Cassel gives a strong performance as a friend of Cosmo. Cassel and Gazarra are two of those actors whose names you won't recognize, but when you see their faces, you'll recognize them. They love to take risks with their performances and you can see the payoffs for yourselves.

    After a half-assed release by Buena Vista in 1989, "Killing of A Chinese Bookie" is finally available on tape and DVD from Anchor Bay Entertainment. The transfer is clean and looks great and the letterbox presentation shows that Cassavetes knew how to use his camera, even if the aspect ratio is small.
    9valis1949

    Murky Realism

    THE KILLING OF A Chinese BOOKIE is John Cassavetes fascinating look into the world of Cosmo Vitelli, owner of the Crazy Horse West, a California strip club. Cosmo, played by Ben Gazzara, owes a fortune in gambling debts, and agrees to commit a murder to payoff the loan. It's a set-up from the get go because the mob never believed he could pull it off, and was hoping that he would be killed, and then they would inherit his club. Cassavetes creates an homage to The French New Wave by employing surreal settings and improvisational dialog to create a Dadaist framework for the tale. Many scenes begin in near blackness, and abruptly, LA sunlight streams into the murky darkness while actors lines ricochet and overlap. The entertainment at the club is not the standard "Bump and Grind", but a strange 'Theater of The Absurd' where Cosmo orchestrates the action, or "he'll throw you out on your ass". Where Martin Scorsese used high energy rock'n'roll to highlight this same gangster demimonde, Cassavetes employs a more idiosyncratic soundtrack to heighten the psychological dimensions of the piece. Ben Gazzara provides an unforgettable portrait of a man grappling with a life that is beyond his ability to control. Also, Seymour Cassel puts in a wonderful performance as a mobbed up club owner. All of Cassavetes's films are noteworthy, and THE KILLING OF A Chinese BOOKIE is one of his finest.
    matt-201

    "The most important thing in life is to be comfortable."

    I've shown this movie to baffled girlfriends and eye-rolling friends who've left the room after twenty minutes. The picture was essentially unreleased upon its completion in 1976, and is now available on video only because of the retrospectives of Cassavetes' work that followed his death. The movie is considered bewildering even by many Cassavetes champions, but for me it ranks among the greatest American movies. As Cosmo Vitelli, the strip-joint owner who's a clown who thinks he's a king, the sublimely reptilian Ben Gazzara leans into an offstage mike and tells the audience, "And if you have any complaints--any complaints at all--we'll throw you right out on your ass." Like Jake LaMotta, or Ferrara's Bad Lieutenant, Cosmo is a walking aria of male self-destruction. He finally pays off the shylocks he's in hock to for his place--the Crazy Horse West--and celebrates with a gambling spree that puts him right back where he started. To pay his debts, Cosmo agrees to murder a Chinese kingpin the L.A. mob has marked for death--but that only gives the barest indication of the strange, ecstatic poetry of Cassavetes' greatest and farthest-out-on-a-limb movie. The movie is a strangely crumpled form of film noir; a classic Cassavetes character portrait, with more than the usual romanticism and self-disgust; a super-subliminal essay on Vietnam and Watergate; and an example of a one-of-a-kind lyricism that's closer to 2001 than a gangster picture. With its odd rhythms, Warholish color and substance-altered performances, it's one of the rare movies for which there exists no point of comparison.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      David Bowie was often present on set during the filming and can be seen in shots of the crowd at Cosmo's Crazy Horse West.
    • Gaffes
      Flo says "That jerk Karl Marx said opium is the religion of the people."

      While the actual Marx quote is "Religion is the opiate of the masses", this is likely to be an intentional misquote from the gangster, showing a lack of true education.
    • Citations

      Cosmo Vitelli: Now, teddy. Teddy. Everything takes work. We'll straighten it out. You know. You gotta work hard to be comfortable. Yeah, a lot of people kid themselves, you know. They-they know when they were born, they know where they're goin'... they know whether they're gonna go to heaven,whether they're gonna go to hell. They think they know that. They kid themselves. Right? But the only people... who are, you know, happy... are the people who are comfortable. That's right. Now, you take, uh, uh, carol, right? A dingbat, right? A ding-a-ling.A dingo. That's what people think she is,'cause that's the truth they want to believe. But, uh, you put her in another situation, right? Put her in a situation that's tough. Stress. Where she's up against something,you'll see she's no fool. Right. 'cause what's your truth... is my falsehood What's my falsehood is your truth and vice versa. Well, look. Look at me, right? I'm only happy when I'm angry... when I'm sad, when i can play the fool... when i can be what people want me to be rather than be myself.

    • Générique farfelu
      Opening scene has Chinese characters scrolling up, similar to a movie from China or Hong Kong.
    • Autres versions
      The original version runs 135 minutes. Two years after the release director John Cassavetes prepared a different theatrical cut with a running time of 108 minutes, both adding and removing scenes resulting in a different film.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Sneak Previews: If We Owned a Movie Theater - Overlooked Films: The Conversation, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, Real Life, The Green Wall, And Now My Love, Happy New Year (1980)
    • Bandes originales
      I Can't Give You Anything but Love
      (uncredited)

      Music by Jimmy McHugh

      Lyrics by Dorothy Fields

      Performed by Meade Roberts and others

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    FAQ15

    • How long is The Killing of a Chinese Bookie?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • octobre 1977 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Smrt kineskog kladionicara
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Gazzarri's, 9039 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood, Californie, États-Unis(Interior and exteriors. Cosmo Vittelli's nightclub, Crazy Horse West.)
    • société de production
      • Faces Distribution
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 19 399 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 15m(135 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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