| | | No One Stays At The Top Forever. Features: DVD, Widescreen Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone and Joe Pesci star in director Martin Scorsese's riveting look at how blind ambition, white-hot passion and 24-karat greed toppled an empire. Las Vegas 1973 is the setting for this fact-based story about the Mob's multi-million dollar casino operation where fortunes and lives were made and lost with a roll of the dice. "...after viewing Casino, you may never look at las vegas in quite the same way..." James Berardinelli's ReelViews "Martin Scorsese is the man, the most viscerally exciting director of his generation..." Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
 Editor's Note
 Martin Scorsese, one of America's most influential filmmakers, returns to the world of mobsters, greed, and excess that he explored so compellingly in 1990's GOODFELLAS. Set in the 1970s and reveling in the minute details of how Las Vegas casinos operate, the film chronicles the rise and fall of casino manager Ace Rothstein (Robert De Niro). As the king of his domain, Ace efficiently runs the business and regularly sends lots of cold cash to his bosses. Helping him keep the casino's employees and customers honest is his best friend, Nicky (Joe Pesci), a violent sociopath. Although Ace aims to run a relatively respectable casino, the volatile Nicky wants to take over the entire gambling mecca, and when Ginger McKenna (Sharon Stone), a seasoned Vegas hustler, enters the picture, Ace and Nicky's friendship is complicated even further. As drugs and alcohol become a bigger part of Ginger's life, all three are eventually brought down by their own greed and blind ambition. CASINO shares many similarities with GOODFELLAS, beginning with a script that was cowritten by Scorsese and Nicholas Pileggi. Regulars De Niro and Pesci are first rate once again as the dissimilar companions, but it is Stone who steals the show with her grueling, intense performance.
 Plot Summary
 Novelist Nicholas Pileggi again teams with Martin Scorsese for this epic drama about life in a casino. Robert De Niro plays Sam "Ace" Rothstein, the Jewish front man for one of the mob's premier Vegas casinos in the 1970s. Joined by strongman Nicky Santoro (Joe Pesci), the casino runs smoothly until an icy blonde (Sharon Stone) jinxes their winning streak. Based on real-life underworld figures Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal and Tony "the Ant" Spilotro, CASINO is another electric crime portrait by the accomplished Scorsese.
| Features | Audio: English, French & Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound |  | Deleted Scenes |  | Director, Actor & Writer Commentary |  | Featurettes: The Story; The Cast And Characters; The Look; After The Filming; Vegas And The Mob; History Alive: True Crime Authors - Casino With Nicholas Pileggi; Moments With Martin Scorcese, Sharon Stone, Nicholas Pileggi |  | Interactive Menus |  | Production Notes |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: French, Spanish |
| Entertainment Reviews
 | Casino - DVD Review By: Christopher Null - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 10/18/2008 8:15 PM | |
The way I see it, Martin Scorsese has one problem: He's in love with the sound of his own voice, as it comes out through the dialogue of films like GoodFellas and now, Casino. Clocking in at three long hours, Casino is an entertaining and engrossing film, but just drags a simple story into a sprawling, epic tale that desperately needs a little trimming.
Based on a true story, Casino is the tale of Sam Rothstein (Robert De Niro), the best of the old bookmakers, who is hand-picked by his mob bosses "Back Home" to go to Las Vegas to run the Tangiers Casino....read the full review |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Universal |
 | Release Date: 5/22/2007 |
 | Running Time: 179 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 1995 |  | Catalog ID: 29796 |  | UPC: 00025192979620 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English, French Dubbed, Spanish Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Anamorphic Widescreen 2.35:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | Oscar (1996) |  | Sharon Stone, Nominee, Best Actress | | Golden Globe (1996) |  | Sharon Stone, Winner, Best Actress |  | Martin Scorsese, Nominee, Best Director |
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| | Professional Reviews | Rolling Stone "...Unmistakably the work of a virtuoso - bold, brutally funny and ferociously alive..." 12/14/1995 p.89-92Sight and Sound "...It serves its theme brilliantly....It constantly dazzles with visual, auditory and thematic stimuli..." 03/01/1996 p.39-40 USA Today "...If you love impassioned cinema, it's the only way to go..." -- 3 1/2 out of 4 stars 11/22/1995 p.1D Variety "...An extraordinary piece of filmmaking....Sharon Stone is simply a revelation here....Technically, CASINO is virtually beyond compare..." 11/20/1995 Los Angeles Times "...Martin Scorsese is a master filmmaker, so skilled in the manipulation of imagery he might be the most proficient of active American directors..." 11/22/1995 p.F1 Chicago Sun-Times "...Fascinating....Scorsese tells his story with the energy and pacing he's famous for, and with a wealth of little details that feel just right..." 11/22/1995 p.41 Premiere "...Scorsese's most complex film, a picture in which every scene is layered with context that reaches far beyond its immediate context..." 06/01/2003 p.101 Uncut "Scorsese here delivers an epic parable about the fall from grace of people who have it all and squander it through their own recklessness..." 09/01/2005 p.144 Uncut Ranked #6 in Uncut's Best DVDs Of 2005 -- "A delirious, visually ravishing, fiendishly intricate epic, it's almost Biblical in places." 01/01/2006 p.84-85 USA Today 8 of 10 ...the spectacular last work on urban sprawl... even grimmer than Goodfellas, but it's tempered by humor and Scorsese's patented counterpoint background pop... if you love impassioned cinema, it's the only way to go. - Mike Clark Chicago Sun-Times 9 of 10 ...[the movie] makes us feel like eavesdroppers in a secret place... Scorsese tell his story with the energy and pacing he's famous for, and with a wealth of little details that feel just right... Scorsese gets the feel, the mood, almost the smell of [Las Vegas] just right... - Roger Ebert
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