Love Is The Drug Casino
Soundtrack Information
Lyrics to Love Is the Drug by Roxy Music from the Island Life: 50 Years of Island Records album - including song video, artist biography, translations and more! Free Movies and TV Shows You Can Watch Now. On IMDb TV, you can catch Hollywood hits and popular TV series at no cost. Select any poster below to play the movie, totally free!
MCA (MCAD2 11389)
Release Date:November 20, 1995
Format: CD
Music By
- Various Artists
Track Listing
Disc 1: Casino | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Contempt - Théme de Camille (Georges Delerue) | 2. | Angelina/Zooma, Zooma Medley (Louis Prima) | 3. | Hoochie Coochie Man (Muddy Waters) | 4. | I'll Take You There (The Staple Singers) | 5. | Nights In White Satin (The Moody Blues) | 6. | How High The Moon (Les Paul and Mary Ford) | 7. | Hurt (Timi Yuro ) | 8. | Ain't Got No Home (Clarence) | 9. | Without You (Nilsson) | 10. | Love Is The Drug (Roxy Music) | 11. | I'm Sorry (Brenda Lee) | 12. | Go Your Own Way (Fleetwood Mac) | 13. | The Thrill Is Gone (B.B. King) | 14. | Love Is Strange (Mickey and Sylvia) | 15. | The 'In' Crowd (Ramsey Lewis) | 16. | Stardust (Hoagy Carmichael) | Disc Time: | 57:00 |
Disc 2: Casino | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1. | Walk On The Wild Side (Jimmy Smith) | 2. | Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa (Sad Song) (Otis Redding) | 3. | I Ain't Superstitious (Jeff Beck & Rod Stewart) | 4. | The Glory Of Love (The Velvetones) | 5. | (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction (Devo) | 6. | What A Difference A Day Makes (Dinah Washington) | 7. | Working In A Coalmine (Lee Dorsey) | 8. | House Of The Rising Sun (Eric Burdon) | 9. | Those Were The Days (Cream) | 10. | Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me) (Tony Bennett) | 11. | Slippin' And Slidin' (Little Richard) | 12. | You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You (Dean Martin) | 13. | Compared To What (Les McCann and Eddie Harris) | 14. | Basin Street Blues/When It's Sleepy Time Down South Medley (Louis Prima) | 15. | Matthaus Passion (The Chicago Symphony Orchestra ) | Disc Time: Total Album Time: | 58:36 115:36 |
Related Albums
GoodFellaHorizon
Released: March 22, 2010
Format: Digital (47 min)
- Click stars
to rate.
If any information appears to be missing from this page, contact us and let us know!
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Casino | |
---|---|
Theatrical movie poster | |
Directed by | Martin Scorsese |
Produced by | Barbara De Fina |
Written by | Screenplay: Nicholas Pileggi Martin Scorsese Book: Nicholas Pileggi |
Narrated by | Robert De Niro Joe Pesci Frank Vincent |
Starring | Robert De Niro Joe Pesci Sharon Stone Frank Vincent Don Rickles Pasquale Cajano James Woods Alan King Kevin Pollak |
Cinematography | Robert Richardson |
Editing by | Thelma Schoonmaker |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date(s) | November 22, 1995 |
Running time | 178 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | |
Budget | $52,000,000[citation needed] |
Gross revenue | $116,112,375 |
Casino is a 1995crimedrama film directed by Martin Scorsese. It is based on the non-fiction book of the same name by Nicholas Pileggi, who also co-wrote the screenplay for the film with Scorsese.
Robert De Niro stars as Sam 'Ace' Rothstein, a Jewish-American top gamblinghandicapper who is called by the Mob to oversee the day-to-day operations at the fictional Tangiers casino in Las Vegas. The story is based on Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal, who ran the Stardust, Fremont and the Haciendacasinos in Las Vegas for the Chicago Outfit from the 1970s until the early 1980s.
Joe Pesci plays Nicky Santoro, based on the real-life mob enforcer Anthony 'Tony the Ant' Spilotro. Nicky is sent to Vegas to make sure that money from the Tangiers is skimmed off the top and that the mobsters in Vegas are kept in line. Sharon Stone plays Ace's wife, the self-obsessed and devious Ginger, a role that earned her a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress and an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.
When released, Casino had the most uses of the word 'fuck' (422) in a feature length film. Casino has been considered a companion piece to Scorsese's earlier film, Goodfellas (1990), which also starred De Niro and Pesci, and was written by Pileggi and Scorsese.
|
Plot
In 1983, Sam 'Ace' Rothstein exits a restaurant and gets into his car, which explodes when he turns it on. Sam then narrates the story, and flashes back to the beginning.
Going back ten years (1973), Sam, then a sports handicapper for the mob, is entrusted by Chicago Outfit bosses to run the Tangiers Casino, which is under their control through corrupt representatives of the Teamsters. Sam is at first reluctant to manage the Tangiers due his criminal record, but is able to do so through lax gaming laws which simply require an application for a casino license to made by employees; and license hearings are held up by a large backlog. Sam's expertise enables him to quickly double the casino's profits, which are skimmed by the mafia before the records are reported to income tax agencies. Impressed with Sam's work, the bosses send Sam's friend, enforcer Nicholas 'Nicky' Santoro, to protect Sam and the whole business. Nicky, however, begins to become more of a nuisance than a helper, as his brash attitude quickly gets him banned from every casino, and his name is placed in the black book. Nicky then gathers his own crew and begins his own businesses, such as a restaurant and a jewelery store, but also engages in burglary, which is not sanctioned by the bosses.
Sam, meanwhile, meets and falls in love with a hustler, Ginger McKenna. Despite Ginger's reluctance, they soon marry. But their relationship slowly begins to fall apart when Ginger is caught by Sam and Nicky aiding her former boyfriend, a con man named Lester Diamond. Sam also makes an enemy in County Commissioner Pat Webb by firing his brother-in-law from the casino. Webb retaliates by pulling Sam's casino licence application from the backlog, forcing Sam to have a license hearing, but secretly arranges for the board to reject the license. Sam responds by appearing on television and openly accuses the city government of corruption. The bosses, unappreciative of Sam's publicity stunts, ask him to return home, but he stubbornly blames Nicky's reckless lawbreaking for his mess. Nicky chastises Sam to never 'go over his head' in a heated argument.
The bosses soon notice that the suitcases of money that they have been stealing have decreasing amounts of money, meaning that the money counters have begun skimming some for themselves. They put Artie Piscano in charge of overseeing the skims, but he complains about the expensive costs. Despite the bosses warning Piscano not to keep financial records, he secretly starts writing down how much he spends in a ledger. Piscano's rants about the extra work and the costs are overheard by the FBI, who bugged his grocery store. Sam finally reaches the end of his patience with Ginger after she and Lester are in Los Angeles with plans to run away to Europe with his daughter Amy in tow. Sam talks Ginger into bringing Amy back, but her addictions anger Sam so much that he kicks her out of the house. She returns, on the condition that she carry a beeper on her for Sam to contact her whenever he must. Ginger turns to Nicky for help in getting her share of her and Sam's money from the bank, and they begin a sexual affair, which according to mob rules, could get the three of them killed (as well as Nicky's crew for covering it up). Sam reaches his limit with Ginger when she ties Amy to her bedposts to have a night with Nicky. Sam confronts Ginger in the restaurant and disowns her. She turns to Nicky, but he has lost patience with her as well. The next morning, Ginger goes to Sam's house and creates a domestic distrubance, stealing the key to their deposit box in the bank. Ginger takes some of Sam's savings, but she is then arrested by FBI agents for aiding the mob.
With Ginger's arrest and the FBI's discovery of Piscano's records, which are then matched with the skimming operation, the casino empire crumbles and the bosses are arrested. During a court hearing, they decide who to eliminate in order to keep from testifying. The slain include Andy Stone, the head of the Teamsters because he is not Italian-American; John Nance, the money courier whose son was arrested and so whom the bosses wanted to silence; and three casino executives to keep silent. Ginger, who runs away from Sam, eventually sinks deeper into drug addiction and is also silenced by the mob, who gave her an intentional drug overdose.
Nicky and his brother, Dominick, arrange a meeting with their crew in a cornfield, but are suddenly turned on and viciously beaten by their own crew with aluminum baseball bats. Nicky sobs while Dominick is brutally beaten, then he is next. The brothers are stripped of their clothes and buried in a freshly-dug grave while still breathing. Sam narrates that the bosses ordered Nicky's death on account of being fed up with his hotheadedness and disregard for order.
Love Is The Drug Youtube
Returning to the opening scene of the film, Sam survives the car bomb, but knows that the bosses were not responsible for it. With the mafia now out of power, the casinos are purchased by several big corporations. In the final scene similar to the ending of Goodfellas, an aged Sam now lives a simpler lifestyle in San Diego working as a sports handicapper.
Cast
Actor | Role | Based on |
---|---|---|
Robert De Niro | Sam 'Ace' Rothstein | Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal |
Joe Pesci | Nicholas 'Nicky' Santoro | Tony 'The Ant' Spilotro |
Sharon Stone | Ginger McKenna Rothstein | Geraldine McGee Rosenthal |
Frank Vincent | Frankie Marino | Frank Cullotta |
Don Rickles | Billy Sherbert | Murray Ehrenberg |
Pasquale Cajano | Remo Gaggi | Joseph Aiuppa |
James Woods | Lester Diamond | Leonard 'Lenny' Marmor |
John Bloom | Donald 'Don' Ward | Slot Machine Manager |
L. Q. Jones | Pat Webb | A Clark County Commissioner |
Kevin Pollak | Philip Green | Allen Glick |
Alan King | Andy Stone | Allen Dorfman |
Bill Allison | John Nance | George Vandermark |
Philip Suriano | Dominick Santoro | Michael Spilotro |
Carl Ciarfalio | Tony Dogs | Billy McCarthy |
Vinny Vella | Artie Piscano | Carl 'Tuffy' DeLuna |
Nobu Matsuhisa | K. K. Ichikawa | Akio Kashiwagi |
Ffiolliott Le Coque | Anna Scott | Tamara Rand |
Bret McCormick | Bernie Blue | Herbert 'Fat Herbie' Blitzstein |
Richard Riehle | Charlie 'Clean Face' Clark | Morris Shenker |
Dick Smothers | Nevada State Senator Harrison Roberts | US Senator Harry Reid[1] (D-NV) |
Oscar Goodman | Himself | Himself |
Frank Cullotta | Curly | Hitman |
Steve Vignari | Beeper | Frank Schweihs |
Development
The research for Casino began when Pileggi read a report from the Las Vegas Sun in 1980 about a domestic argument between Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal, a casino figure and his wife, Geri McGee, a former topless dancer.[2] This gave him an idea to focus on a new book about the true story of mob infringement in Las Vegas during the 1970s, when filming of Goodfellas (the screenplay which he co-wrote with Scorsese) was coming to an end.[3] Pileggi decided to contact Scorsese about taking the helm of the project which would become known as Casino.[2] Scorsese expressed interest in the project calling this an 'idea of success, no limits'.[4] Although Pileggi was keen to release the book and then concentrate on a film adaption, Scorsese encouraged him to 'reverse the order'.[5]
Love Is The Drug Chords And Lyrics
Screenplay
Scorsese and Pileggi collaborated on the script lasting for a total of five months, towards the end of 1994.[3] Real-life characters such as Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal, Geri, Anthony Spilotro and his brother were reshaped. Some characters were combined as well as parts of the story being set in Las Vegas instead of Chicago. A problem emerged when they were forced to refer Chicago as 'back home' and use the words 'adapted from a true story' instead of 'based on a true story'.[4] They also decided to simplify the script, so that the character of Sam 'Ace' Rothstein only worked at the Tangiers Casino to show a glimpse of the trials involved in operating a mafia run casino hotel without overwhelming the audience.[4] According to Scorsese, the initial opening sequence was to feature the main character, Sam Rothstein, fighting with his estranged wife, Ginger, on the lawn on their house. Since the scene was too detailed, they changed the sequence to show the explosion of Sam's car and see him fly into the air before hovering over the flames in slow motion—like a soul about to go straight down in hell.[4]
Principal photography
Filming took place in The Riviera Casino in Las Vegas to replicate the fictional Tangiers, during the night - which was once as late as 4:00 in the morning. According to the producer Barbara De Fina, there was no point building a set if the same cost was to use a real-life one.[4] The opening scene - Sam's car explosion - was shot three times with the latter one being used for the film from the real life account of Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal of the way he managed to escape.[4] The precise details of the explosion were seen to suggest that you never forget these moments if you know how close you can come to being killed.[4] According to Martin Scorsese, 'we (with Nicholas Pileggi) wanted to show the end of the old way'.[4]
Reception
While the film was heavily criticized for its excessive violence, it garnered a mostly positive critical response. Rotten Tomatoes gave the film an 83% 'fresh' rating.[6] On Metacritic, the rating is 73 (generally favorable reviews) out of 100 based on 17 reviews.[citation needed]
Awards
Sharon Stone was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role as well as a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture — Drama. Martin Scorsese was also nominated for a Golden Globe as Best Director - Motion Picture.
Soundtrack
Casino: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | |
---|---|
Soundtrack by Various Artists | |
Released | November 20, 1995 |
Genre | Soundtrack |
Label | MCA |
Track listing
Disc one
- 'Contempt - Theme De Camille' - Georges Delerue
- 'Angelina/Zooma, Zooma Medley' - Louis Prima
- 'Hoochie Coochie Man' - Muddy Waters
- 'I'll Take You There' - The Staple Singers
- 'Nights in White Satin' - The Moody Blues
- 'How High The Moon' - Les Paul & Mary Ford
- 'Hurt' - Timi Yuro
- 'Ain't Got No Home' - Clarence 'Frogman' Henry
- 'Without You' - Nilsson
- 'Love Is the Drug' - Roxy Music
- 'I'm Sorry' - Brenda Lee
- 'Go Your Own Way' - Fleetwood Mac
- 'The Thrill Is Gone' - B.B. King
- 'Love Is Strange' - Mickey & Sylvia
- 'The 'In' Crowd' - Ramsey Lewis
- 'Stardust' - Hoagy Carmichael
Disc two
- 'Walk on the Wild Side' - Jimmy Smith
- 'Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa (Sad Song)' - Otis Redding
- 'I Ain't Superstitious' - Jeff Beck Group
- 'The Glory of Love' - The Velvetones
- '(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction' - Devo
- 'What a Diff'rence a Day Made' - Dinah Washington
- 'Working in the Coal Mine' - Lee Dorsey
- 'House of the Rising Sun' - The Animals
- 'Those Were the Days' - Cream
- 'Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)' - Tony Bennett
- 'Slippin' and Slidin' - Little Richard
- 'You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You' - Dean Martin
- 'Compared to What' - Les McCann & Eddie Harris
- 'Basin Street Blues/When It's Sleepy Time Down South' - Louis Prima
- 'St. Matthew Passion (Wir setzen uns mit Tränen nieder)' - Johann Sebastian Bach (Chicago Symphony Orchestra)
Additional songs in the film
- 'Layla' - Derek and the Dominos (also used prominently in the film's trailers)
- 'Moonglow / theme from Picnic' - Eddie DeLange/Irving Mills
- 'Sing Sing Sing' - Louis Prima
- '7-11 (Mambo #5)' - The Gone All Stars
- 'Long Long While' - The Rolling Stones
- 'Heart of Stone' - The Rolling Stones
- 'Nel blu Dipinto di Blu (Volare)' - Domenico Modugno
- 'Takes Two to Tango' - Ray Charles & Betty Carter
- 'Unforgettable' - Dinah Washington
- 'Love Me the Way I Love You' - Jerry Vale
- 'Let's Start All Over' - The Paragons
- '(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction' - The Rolling Stones
- 'Sweet Virginia' - The Rolling Stones
- 'Stella by Starlight' - Ray Charles
- 'Sweet Dreams' - Emmylou Harris
- 'Can't You Hear Me Knocking' - The Rolling Stones
- 'Toad' - Cream
- 'Gimme Shelter' (live version from the No Security album) - The Rolling Stones
- 'EEE-O Eleven' 1960 Oceans Eleven - Sammy Davis, Jr.
- 'I'll Walk Alone' - Don Cornell
- 'Whip It' - Devo
- 'I'm Confessing That I Love You' - Louis Prima & Keely Smith
- 'Harbor Lights' - The Platters
References
- Notes
- ^Harry Reid is not boring. - By Chris Suellentrop - Slate Magazine
- ^ ab Baxter, John DeNiro: A Biography p.336.
- ^ ab Thompson, David and Christie, Ian Scorsese on Scorsese p.198.
- ^ abcdefgh Thompson, David and Christie, Ian Scorsese on Scorsese pp.200-204.
- ^ Baxter, John DeNiro: A Biography p.337.
- ^Casino Movie Reviews, Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes.
- Bibliography
- Thompson, David; Chrstie, Ian (1996). Scorsese on Scorsese. Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0571220021.
- Evans, David (2006). DeNiro: A Biography.
External links
- Casino at the Internet Movie Database
- Casino at Rotten Tomatoes
- Casino at Metacritic
- Casino at Allmovie
- Casino at Box Office Mojo
- Casino at the TCM Movie Database
|