Fedja, scrittore di successo rimane incantato dalla bellezza di Pauline Ostrovsky, frequentandola si trova a contato con giocatori d'azzardo, comincia cosi a studiare l'aspetto sociale del g... Leggi tuttoFedja, scrittore di successo rimane incantato dalla bellezza di Pauline Ostrovsky, frequentandola si trova a contato con giocatori d'azzardo, comincia cosi a studiare l'aspetto sociale del gioco e la lenta discesa negli inferi del vizio.Fedja, scrittore di successo rimane incantato dalla bellezza di Pauline Ostrovsky, frequentandola si trova a contato con giocatori d'azzardo, comincia cosi a studiare l'aspetto sociale del gioco e la lenta discesa negli inferi del vizio.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Secretary
- (as Frederick Ledebur)
- Hotel Manager
- (as Ludwig Stossel)
- Valet
- (as Erno Verebes)
- Gambling Casino Patron
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- Nervous Young Gambler
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- Croupier
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- Staring Casino Patron
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- Gambling Casino Accountant
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- Female Fountain Attendant
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Recensioni in evidenza
Fedor's motive is first love ,but little by little,he realizes he is actually in love with gambling,with the numbers.His desire for an "8 " is almost sexual;in the hotel,every number (the key number, etc) calls him to the casino.The depiction of the place where people are feverishly waiting for the stopping of the roulette is absolutely extraordinary.Gregory Peck gives a riveting performance as the gambler down on his luck,and Ava Gardner's beauty shines all along the film.The supporting cast is up to scratch: Melvyn Douglas is like a puppeteer (the scene when he pretends he can't find Ostrovsky's notes belongs to him); Frank Morgan as a fallen mathematic teacher and Agnes Moorehead as the owner of a seedy pawn shop make all their scenes count.Ethel Barrymore is so talented an actress she does not need any words (except "banco" ) to express her gambling fever.
Like this ?try these.....
"Le Joueur" Claude Autant-Lara 1958 another Dostoievski adaptation,inferior to Siodmak's version.
"lo scopone scientifico" Luigi Comencini 1972
"La dame de Pique" Leonard Keigel 1965
Which left Gregory Peck who was apparently a second choice to play the Russian writer who stops off at the gambling resort of Wiesbaden in the 1860s just before German unification. He's on his way to Paris, but one sight of Ava Gardner getting off at Wiesbaden, makes Peck decide to abruptly change his plans.
As for Ava, certainly one can understand that she's beautiful enough to let one's hormones take over, but I got the feeling Ava just wasn't into the part really, as Greg was also not. It's also hard to believe that Walter Huston had won an Oscar for his previous film, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. To overcome a trite story, Huston overacts outrageously, pulling everything out of a ham's bag of tricks.
Even Melvyn Douglas as the scheming casino owner takes his nineteenth century villainy from the Snidely Whiplash tradition. Agnes Moorehead as the old crone of a pawnbroker also indulges in some scenery chewing, her best example of that since Dark Passage.
Best in the film in my humble opinion is Frank Morgan as the former mathematics professor and now addicted gambler. He brings a real aura of tragedy to his small role.
The Great Sinner is a sluggishly paced film with a lot of very talented people just going through the motions. For a gambling story, I'll take Casino.
Don't believe me, Wanna bet?
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDeborah Kerr was initially scheduled to co-star with Gregory Peck. Then Lana Turner was slotted for the role, and then withdrawn from the production due to her extended European honeymoon with Henry J. Topping, Jr. Finally, Ava Gardner was cast in what turned out to be the first of three films to co-star the pair, along with Le nevi del Chilimangiaro (1952) and L'ultima spiaggia (1959).
- BlooperEven though the setting of the film is established as the 1860s, everyone in this film are smoking machine made cigarettes (the cigarettes in this film clearly are NOT hand rolled cigarettes). BUT the cigarette making machine, which could make cigarettes in large quantities, was not invented until the 1880s, a couple of decades to come.
- Citazioni
Pauline Ostrovsky: Oh, you can count on my vanity. No matter what you say I'll regard it as a compliment.
Fedja: All right, if you insist. To one of the most corrupt women I've ever met.
Pauline Ostrovsky: Corrupt?
Fedja: Corrupt, confused, frustrated, and empty.
Pauline Ostrovsky: But in a charming sort of way, you'll admit.
Fedja: Well charm, my dear is your gambling capital. You toss it on the table like money, like everything else, even a dying grandmother.
Pauline Ostrovsky: When a man takes the trouble to be so rude to a woman, he is usually falling in love with her.
Fedja: You're not a woman. You are a symptom.
Pauline Ostrovsky: Of what?
Fedja: Of one of the worlds deadliest diseases, sophistication. More champagne?
Pauline Ostrovsky: What else am I?
Fedja: You are irritatingly beautiful.
Pauline Ostrovsky: Well, at last!
Fedja: And everything, I reject.
- ConnessioniEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 2.075.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 50min(110 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1