IMDb RATING
5.9/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
A dice roller falls in love with a talented dancer who happens to be the wife to a gangster.A dice roller falls in love with a talented dancer who happens to be the wife to a gangster.A dice roller falls in love with a talented dancer who happens to be the wife to a gangster.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Alvaro D'Antonio
- Prager
- (as Mark Danton)
David James Elliott
- Cool Guy
- (as David Elliott)
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- Writers
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Featured reviews
I was attracted to this movie when I looked at cast list, but after I watched it I must admit that I felt a bit disappointed. The main problem of this movie is that actors aren't capable of holding this movie on their back. Why? Because of bad script. Although Dillon, Lane and Jones try very hard to take this movie on another level, there is no innovative storytelling and the direction is too ordinary. So for Matt Dillon fans this is watchable movie, just like for admirers of beautiful Diane Lane. Legendary Tommy Lee Jones is always great but this is not movie for him; far below his level. So if you get hooked up by this great cast watch it but don't expect anything big or extraordinary. The only thing that you'll remember about this flick is Diane Lane scenes; rest of it is very forgettable.
This is one of those movies you find on the television in the wee hours of the morning. Matt Dillon does a credible job as a young man trying to break into big time gambling- craps not a skilled game like poker. Of course, he is torn between two women- one good and one rather conniving. Tommy Lee Jones plays a man who wants to break this young upstart. The action is lively and the side stories keep the movie going. The music from the 50's is a nice addition to the sound track.
Matt Dillon plays a hayseed crap shooter with unbeatable luck who, in late 1950s Chicago, joins a Windy City syndicate and falls hard for the femme fatale wife of an unscrupulous gambling boss. Despite some errors in casting this otherwise familiar urban crime story is, at least in presentation, a lot smarter than it may first appear. The relative youth of the two leads is fatally inconsistent with the very grown up crime and passion scenario, but director Ben Bolt wisely underplays the neo-Noir mood by refusing to rely on the trendy smoke-and-strobe-light pyrotechnics so common in modern thrillers. The gritty urban setting is instead recreated in all its cheap romantic glamour, and the script has its arcane gambling slang down pat, but the film is something of an anachronism in today's over-hyped market: a competent (if minor) drama, made thirty years too late.
The year is 1957 and in the small town of Rockport, Indiana a young man by the name of "J.C. Cullen" (Matt Dillon) dreams of making it big in Chicago by counting the odds and throwing dice. Even his mentor "Carl Hooker" (Don Francks) admits that he is the best craps shooter he has ever seen-and Hooker has seen some of the best. So with the encouragement of his good friend and a recommendation to a reputable sponsor by the name of "Ferguson Edwards" (Lee Grant) J.C. gets on the bus and heads out to the Windy City to try his luck. And it's here that he meets people who will make an indelible impression on him for the rest of his life. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that I really liked this movie. Not only does it capture the timeframe rather well but it also included a solid cast with good performances by just about everybody involved with Diane Lane (as "Lorry Dane") and Tom Skerritt (as "Phil Carpenter") truly standing out. In short, I consider this to be an underrated picture and recommend it to viewers who might be interested in a film of this sort.
Considering the big name cast and lavish production I expected a lot more of this film. The acting for the most part is great, although the story they have to work with is mediocre at best. However the film still warrants watching because of the acting and the stars and some and up and coming young talent.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film's budget allowed $600 for Matt Dillon to learn to play craps in real games. To make sure the money lasted, a film crew member always bet against him for the same amount so their wins and losses cancelled out.
- GoofsThe sound of dice rolling after Cole announces their total.
- Quotes
George Cole: Cullen, you're gonna pay for this!
- SoundtracksHome of the Blues
Written by Johnny Cash, Glen Douglas and Lillie McAlpin
Performed by Johnny Cash
Courtesy of Sun Records Int.
By arrangement with Original Sound Entertainment
- How long is The Big Town?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,733,017
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $776,675
- Sep 27, 1987
- Gross worldwide
- $1,733,017
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