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Phoenix

  • 1998
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
Phoenix (1998)
Home Video Trailer from Trimark
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
63 Photos
CrimeDrama

A cop (Liotta) with a gambling addiction plots a theft from the bookies who are putting pressure on him to pay off or else.A cop (Liotta) with a gambling addiction plots a theft from the bookies who are putting pressure on him to pay off or else.A cop (Liotta) with a gambling addiction plots a theft from the bookies who are putting pressure on him to pay off or else.

  • Director
    • Danny Cannon
  • Writer
    • Eddie Richey
  • Stars
    • Ray Liotta
    • Anthony LaPaglia
    • Daniel Baldwin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Danny Cannon
    • Writer
      • Eddie Richey
    • Stars
      • Ray Liotta
      • Anthony LaPaglia
      • Daniel Baldwin
    • 55User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Phoenix (1998)
    Trailer 2:18
    Phoenix (1998)

    Photos63

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    Top cast37

    Edit
    Ray Liotta
    Ray Liotta
    • Harry Collins
    Anthony LaPaglia
    Anthony LaPaglia
    • Mike Henshaw
    Daniel Baldwin
    Daniel Baldwin
    • James Nutter
    Jeremy Piven
    Jeremy Piven
    • Fred Shuster
    Royce D. Applegate
    Royce D. Applegate
    • Dickerman
    Xander Berkeley
    Xander Berkeley
    • Lt. Clyde Webber
    Tamara Clatterbuck
    Tamara Clatterbuck
    • Waitress
    Vanessa Munday
    • Betsy
    Al Sapienza
    Al Sapienza
    • Cop
    Yvette Cruise
    Yvette Cruise
    • Maria
    John Henry Whitaker
    John Henry Whitaker
    • Husband
    Glenn Morshower
    Glenn Morshower
    • Anti-Abortionist
    Brittany Murphy
    Brittany Murphy
    • Veronica
    George Murdock
    George Murdock
    • Sid
    Kathryn Joosten
    Kathryn Joosten
    • Esther
    Giancarlo Esposito
    Giancarlo Esposito
    • Louie
    Ernest M. Garcia
    • Chubby
    David Dunard
    • Murray
    • Director
      • Danny Cannon
    • Writer
      • Eddie Richey
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews55

    6.34.5K
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    Featured reviews

    bob the moo

    At last - a good Danny Cannon film

    Harry is a police officer - he is also a degenerate gambler in debt to bookie Chicago for $32K. That's basically the plot, it seems simple but it is enough to drive the film's core once it has been surrounded by plot twists, tension, strong performances, interesting characters and good dialogue.

    Hats off to Danny Cannon - he was the great British hope once after making Young Americans and going to the US he then messed up with Judge Dredd. But here he shows that he does have talent to lead a dark thriller successfully - albeit he is helped greatly by the plot and his actors. The film follows Harry and his 3 colleagues as they revolve around several loan sharks and bookies whilst also trying to have lives and relationships. The main focus is Harry's addiction to gambling in all areas of his life. There is also a subplot involving Angelica Huston which is meant to represent Harry's potential redemption, but this is not well developed and is secondary to the main story. The story eventually turns into a heist-gone-wrong movie but even then has enough twists to keep the interest.

    The main strength of the film lies in the actors that are assembled together here. Liotta plays the role well, making it possible to like this person but also making his gambling side believable - it's hard not to feel for him and his bad luck as the film progresses. Anthony Lapaglia, Daniel Baldwin, Jeremy Piven are all excellent for different reasons as his colleagues. Piven good as the cop drawn into things he doesn't want to do and Baldwin and Lapaglia are as solid as every in corrupt roles. Both Ribisi and Huston are capable of great performances but neither have a lot to work with here in terms of time or plot involvement. Giancarlo Esposito is as good as ever in a small role as Louie the loanshark - but then I've never seen him put in a bad performance, even in a bad film.

    Overall the plot is similar to many other crime thrillers out there. What makes this rise above the normal TV material is a dark atmosphere from Danny Cannon, a strong lead in Liotta with uniformly great support from the rest of the cast and tension an twists throughout.
    chaos-rampant

    Fates calling the shots

    I was expecting straight-to-video fodder here the kind you watch stupefied because it happened to be on late at night. It revealed itself to be a taut little thing that tries to create its own world.

    It was caught in the Tarantino craze so we have small talk about cartoons, movies and music peppered throughout. It has, eventually, a heist in animal masks gone awry that makes poor sense and cookie cutter resolutions where we drive around to settle scores with a bunch of characters that were left hanging so that it's all neat by the end.

    For a while it manages to strike some spark, most of it in the first half.

    A man who we understand is trying to be upstanding while everyone around him is fickle, but he has a blind spot for gambling. It's not about the money, for him it seems to be a warped way of measuring himself up against the universe, challenging the fates to pave whatever way they have in store so he can have a mandate to abide by. He makes a mess, owing everyone in town, but won't take the easy way out because a bet is a bet; opportunity for self-worth.

    So when the fates shuffle the deck and he's dealt the role of hapless stooge who loses everything, he goes through it with stoic persistence to settle debts. Ray Liotta is as good as he was for Scorsese in a similar twitchy role as fates conspire to crush him.

    It's no Asphalt Jungle where the heist is the ritual that opens us from anxiety to dreamlike visions, but it beats Reservoir Dogs.

    Noir Meter: 2/4 | Neo-noir or post noir? Neo
    jmorrison-2

    HIDDEN GEM!

    I, too, had never heard of this movie. I never saw it advertised, and I never saw it at theaters. I happened to stumble on this on cable one night. Man, what an excellent movie. A dark, brooding movie of desperation and corruption. Ray Liotta is as good as I've ever seen him, and Anthony LaPaglia nearly steals the movie with his portrayal of an evil, brutal cop, whom you will hope and pray you never cross paths with. Just an excellent little movie that, it appears, not too many people knew about. Very well done!
    7refinedsugar

    Cool little film

    Sometimes I question why one movie gets theatrical distribution while another does not. To be fair, I think things generally swing the right way. Movies that call video their home do it for sometimes a much deserved reason: they stink. This is not the case with Phoenix however.

    It's a breath of fresh air to take a chance on a direct-to-video quickie and have it turn out this good. The story is tight and look at all the recognizable faces in the cast. That helps me out. The whole police officer-gambling junky angle is different - Liotta as the lead carries it off well and Phoenix is just all around better than most cop boilers I've seen in the last six months. It sure ain't lacking in clichés of the genre, but that has come to be expected. Phoenix is just a well filmed, nicely acted piece of work from director Danny Cannon who makes amends for the theatrical bomb Judge Dredd. Worth a look on a slow night or for Liotta fans.
    jayandsjosh

    Bad Cable Action Cinema At Its Best!

    Did you ever see one of those awful action thrillers or crime dramas (where, as Jon Stewart once pointed out, "all the action takes place in a strip club"), usually starring Mickey Rourke, Eric Roberts, Rutger Hauer, Michael Madsen, or some refugee from the Brat Pack, on late night cable? Well, "Phoenix" is the "Chinatown" of those movies. Which, in case you miss my meaning, means it's really quite good.

    This is a supremely fun film if you like (or hate but have seen) any of these B action flicks. It should be used in film schools when teaching this overlooked genre ("Contemporary exploitation films," they'd probably call them.). This movie has a loan shark, a bookie, crooked cops, bagmen, a strip joint that figures prominently in the plot, a sultry siren in bed with everybody, a cleverly masked heist, a lucky fill-in-the-blank item, a burned out beauty with a sexy jailbait daughter, and a hero with a chance at redemption, if only he can keep from screwing everything up. This movie's got everything, and that's the point.

    Ray Liotta stars (in, for my money, the best performance of his career) and, although one of the aforementioned crooked cops, has an incorruptible sense of honor. For example, he has accumulated a substantial gambling debt, but won't let anyone else pay it off or make it go away because he refuses to "welsh." It's a piece of advice given to him by his late gambler father, you'll probably not be surprised to learn.

    The plot is, to pay off the sizable debt, Liotta and three of his fellow crooked cops mastermind a heist in a strip club where everything goes wrong while they wear funny animal masks. "But," as I often tell people, "it's not like it sounds."

    If you're still not convinced, the fact that Anjelica Huston is a part of this film's great cast should tell you something. Also, watch out for the amazing Tom Noonan as a lisping bookie and a scene with Giovanni Ribisi where you can see the conclusion coming but is still satisfying even if you've already figured it out because of Liotta's intense performance.

    3 out of 4 stars on the fun scale. (Probably less on the quality scale.)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jeremy Piven, Xander Berkeley, and Tom Noonan all appeared in Heat (1995) but did not share any scenes; Jeremy Piven as Dr. Bob, Xander Berkeley as Ralph, and Tom Noonan as Kelso.
    • Quotes

      Harry Collins: Never welsh on a bet.

    • Connections
      References King Kong (1933)
    • Soundtracks
      Ama
      Written by Daniel Riddle & David Parks

      Performed by Hitting Birth

      Courtesy of Will Records

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 21, 1999 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Arnaque le dernier pari
    • Filming locations
      • Phoenix, Arizona, USA
    • Production companies
      • Trimark Pictures
      • Lakeshore Entertainment
      • Graham / Nevinny Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $45,661
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,579
      • Sep 7, 1998
    • Gross worldwide
      • $54,135
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 47 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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