Casino 1995 Production

Casino 1995 Production 6,9/10 442 reviews

A version of this story about the production design of “The Irishman” first appeared in the Oscar Nominations Preview issue of TheWrap’s Oscar magazine.

A casino, which is a place that legally allows people to engage in the activities of gambling and recreational consumption, can also directly and indirectly cause impacts. These impacts are somehow tangible and intangible in the host community, in which casino gamblers interact with the local environment, economy, and society.

  1. Financial analysis of Casino (1995) including budget, domestic and international box office gross, DVD and Blu-ray sales reports, total earnings and profitability.
  2. 'Casino' is a 1995 American epic crime drama film directed by 'Martin Scorsese' and starring 'Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci & Sharon Stone'.Casino was released o.

Production designer Bob Shaw knew the territory when he signed on to do Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman.” Not only had he worked with Scorsese on “The Wolf of Wall Street” and helped design the iconic organized-crime series “The Sopranos” and “Boardwalk Empire,” he was from South Philadelphia, the main setting in “The Irishman.” He even had relatives (his grandmother’s brothers) who owned a lingerie shop that didn’t actually sell lingerie. “Apparently, they were bookies,” he said.

But “The Irishman” was still a mammoth undertaking, with 295 different locations and 28 different sets. “It called for a tremendous level of detail,” Shaw said. “Marty is very detail-oriented and likes to be as accurate as possible. He likes a lot of references — if you think something is appropriate, he wants you to demonstrate why it’s appropriate.”

Also Read:10 Best Narrative Films of 2019, From 'Parasite' to 'The Irishman' (Photos)

Shaw had a lengthy preproduction period, including several months of scouting potential locations with the location manager. “You begin to develop a list of what you’ll build and what you’ll look for,” he said.

Casino 1995 Production

The trickiest locations included five different vintage gas stations — because, Shaw said, gas stations tend to be refurbished and updated, making it almost impossible to find a truly vintage one. (It’s better, he added, to find buildings that once might have been gas stations and have since been converted into auto shops, and then add the pumps back in.)

Casino 1995 production

He also looked for a series of hotels, among them a Howard Johnson’s (the chain doesn’t exist anymore, but he found one that was still standing), a late ’40s hotel in Chicago and a colonial one in Washington, D.C. (Below, you can see how he (1) took an abandoned motel location, (2) sketched it as a vintage Howard Johnson’s and (3) completed the look for a finished scene in movie with Joe Pesci and De Niro’s characters.)

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Also Read:'The Irishman' Was Watched 26.4 Million Times in Its First Week, Netflix's Ted Sarandos Says

The Latin Casino, a hall at which the title character receives a Teamsters award, was also a difficult find. “The real Latin Casino was in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, down the street from my aunt Jeannie,” he said. “We needed ours to be just the right size, so it can appear quite full without having an insanely large crowd. We chose this place with a big curved ceiling, which was a bit of a liberty — the real Latin Casino was more of a banquet hall, very low. When we were looking for the exterior, I told the scouts, ‘Look for a closed supermarket.'”

But the setting that got the most action was the Villa di Roma restaurant. “That was the biggest example of a time where the truth is not really cinematically interesting,” he said. “A version of the Villa di Roma still exists, but it’s a very plain brick box — the kind of place that has the menu on the wall on a black felt board with stick-on letters. It isn’t very evocative.”

“The Irishman” version of the Villa di Roma, he said, is “a compendium of different things. Marty was a little slow to be sold on us building it — he thought it would be hard to get the atmosphere of decades of use and wear. So it was a challenge to create a set that he felt at home in, and we did that by having as many off-notes as we could find. The ceiling tiles are wonky because there was a flood at some point, they had to replace some of them and the colors don’t match. There are cracks on the floor. I took pictures at a place that had dust and grease on all the vents, and we simulated that.

“We wanted it to look really lived-in, so you could assume that it had already been around for 20 or 30 years before we see it for the first time in the movie.”

Read more of the Oscar Nominations Preview issue here.

Martin Scorsese's Crime Films Ranked, From 'Boxcar Bertha' to 'The Irishman' (Photos)

Casino 1995 Productions

  • Martin Scorsese has made 25 narrative feature films, and only eight of them have been about people who live a criminal lifestyle. Yet when we think about his work, we think about the gangsters. Not Alice (who doesn’t live here anymore), not Christ (and his last temptation), but wise guys in slick suits who break the law, look good doing it, and always end up dead, miserable or both.

    That’s probably because Scorsese, who grew up in New York City and knows the culture intimately, brings a specificity to his crime movies that matches his well-known virtuosity behind a camera. He may have made more films about other subjects than he has about criminals, but he helped define the way we look at criminality on screen. And he keeps coming back to the subject, again and again, to refine his techniques and to approach similar topics from all-new angles.

    Let’s take a look at all the Scorsese movies that can confidently be called “crime” films, and see how they stack up against each other, which ones are truly essential:

    Netflix
  • 8. 'Boxcar Bertha' (1972)

    Martin Scorsese’s first crime movie -- and second feature -- stars Barbara Hershey as the eponymous young woman in the Great Depression whose boyfriend Big Bill (David Carradine) tries to start a railroad union. But when the law turns them into criminals, they decide to play the part for real and begin robbing the rich. Hershey is great, and so is Bernie Casey as their most dignified partner in crime, but the subtle character work and commentary about 1930s racism, sexism and economic disparity get lost in the lurid violence and sensuality that producer Roger Corman demanded of his exploitation cinema in the 1970s. “Boxcar Bertha” is at war with itself, and although Scorsese’s work was undeniably promising, it’s a war that nobody wins.

    Photo by American International Pictures/Getty Images
  • 7. 'Gangs of New York' (2002)

    Arguably Scorsese’s most epic production, with elaborate sets that recreate mid-19th century New York City, “Gangs of New York” stars Leonardo DiCaprio as Amsterdam Vallon, a thief who sidles up to boisterous gangster Bill “The Butcher” Cutting (Daniel Day-Lewis), the man who killed Amsterdam’s father. Scorsese’s gigantic film is a masterpiece of period detail, from the sets to the costumes to the painstakingly recreated period-accurate accents. Unfortunately, the story gets lost in all the research; the film’s subplots are all more captivating than Amsterdam’s relationship with Bill, on which the entire movie supposedly hangs. Daniel Day-Lewis and most of the film’s supporting cast seem to fully inhabit this vibrant old world, with broad performances that could be straight out of a silent movie. In contrast, DiCaprio’s and co-star Cameron Diaz’s relatively contemporary acting styles make them look like they wandered in from another film.

    Touchstone Pictures
  • 6. 'The Irishman' (2019)

    Scorsese’s biopic about Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran, the man who allegedly killed Jimmy Hoffa, is a panoramic gangster epic unlike any of his other panoramic gangster epics. Robert De Niro stars as Frank, who develops close relationships with mobster Russell Bufalino (Joe Pesci) and Hoffa (Al Pacino) over the course of many years, while short-changing his family and accomplishing nothing of consequence other than a body count. “The Irishman” goes right up to the point where all other gangster movies would end, then keeps going, as these powerful wise guys wither and die, giving Scorsese’s whole contribution to the gangster genre a fitting, thoughtful and melancholy denouement. But although the film is designed to play like the ramblings of an old man, it arguably does that job a little too well, and sometimes strains to justify its colossal running time.

    Netflix
  • 5. 'The Departed' (2006)

    Scorsese’s remake of Andrew Lau and Alan Mak’s sleek and stunning Hong Kong classic “Infernal Affairs” is huge and sloppy, but never less than riveting. Leonardo DiCaprio stars as Billy Costigan, a cop sent undercover with demonic Boston mobster Frank Costello, played by Jack Nicholson. What Costigan doesn’t realize is that Costello has his own sleeper agent, Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon), who’s infiltrated the task force that’s out to get Costello. The plot gets more complicated and fascinating when Costigan and Sullivan are assigned to root out the mole in both organizations, forcing them to chase after each other -- and themselves. Scorsese keeps the tricky storyline easy to follow, and Jack Nicholson gives an iconic performance, with Vera Farmiga, Alec Baldwin and Oscar-nominee Mark Wahlberg popping off the screen with memorable supporting turns. “The Departed” isn’t Scorsese’s richest gangster movie, but it may be his most thrilling.

    Warner Bros.
  • 4. 'Mean Streets' (1973)

    Harvey Keitel and Robert De Niro have breakout roles in Scorsese’s first film about Italian-American gangsters, a free-flowing slice-of-life drama about low-level thugs balancing friendship, romance and minor scams in New York City in the 1960s. Keitel plays Charlie, a young mobster who struggles to balance the lifestyle he loves with his Catholic upbringing, opposite De Niro as Johnny Boy, the carefree firecracker who’s got debts all over town and an ever-growing list of enemies. Charlie tries to keep Johnny Boy out of trouble, but he may be powerless to prevent this coming-of-age tale from turning into a bitter tragedy. Scorsese's film is so dense with incidental detail that it doesn't feel like you're watching these moments; it feels like you fell into them, and the eclectic soundtrack and inventive camera work make even lazy evenings at the bar with the fellas pop like fireworks.

    Warner Bros.
  • 3. 'The Wolf of Wall Street' (2013)

    White-collar crime gets filmed with all the overwhelming zeal of a violent gangster epic in Scorsese’s hilarious and bitter biopic about stock-market con man Jordan Belfort. Leonardo DiCaprio gives a masterful and bizarrely physical performance as Belfort, who stole millions and millions and doesn’t get treated like a mobster because he never put a gun to anyone’s head, even though he obviously should. “The Wolf of Wall Street” is a wild and vicious condemnation of a system that rewards the despicable, while admitting, in no uncertain terms, the shiny appeal of Belfort’s road to moral dissolution. DiCaprio gives his finest, funniest and most intriguing performance as Belfort, while Margot Robbie dazzles in her breakout turn as his wife, Naomi.

    Paramount Pictures
  • 2. 'Casino' (1995)

    Scorsese’s exposé of the Las Vegas criminal underworld isn’t one of his typical morality tales: It’s discordant and intensified, and it never seems to take a breath (just like Vegas itself), and its storyline doesn’t so much come to an end as get suddenly beaten to death. Robert De Niro stars as “Ace” Rothstein, a gambling expert who’s given the reins of his own casino, the Tangiers, while his childhood friend Nicky Santoro (Joe Pesci) takes over the violent crime along the strip, and his wife Ginger (Sharon Stone) gradually dissolves into depression and drug abuse because Ace won’t let her go. “Casino” is excessive on every cinematic level, but Scorsese keeps it focused, employing dazzling imagery and stunning editing to convey the grotesqueries of Vegas with all of the majesty that cinema allows.

    Universal Pictures
  • 1. 'Goodfellas' (1990)

    As far back as Henry Hill can remember, he always wanted to be a gangster. Scorsese’s masterpiece follows young Hill from his early days as a street hustler to the inner mafia circles, into absolute desperation and decay, and onward into limbo. As Hill, Ray Liotta captures the slickness and the slime of criminal excess, while Joe Pesci’s hair-trigger temper offers a constant reminder that every single moment of this seemingly appealing lifestyle could lead directly to your own murder, only seconds later. Captivating cinematography (by Michael Ballhaus) captures the glitz, while the film expands and contracts to show how fleeting success can be, and how interminable your last day as a free man feels. Revealing, earnest, beautiful and cruel, “Goodfellas” is the ultimate Scorsese experience.

    Warner Bros.
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In honor of the 30th anniversary of “Goodfellas,” we take a look at the Oscar-winning director’s cornucopia of films about people who live a criminal lifestyle

Casino 1995 production

Martin Scorsese has made 25 narrative feature films, and only eight of them have been about people who live a criminal lifestyle. Yet when we think about his work, we think about the gangsters. Not Alice (who doesn’t live here anymore), not Christ (and his last temptation), but wise guys in slick suits who break the law, look good doing it, and always end up dead, miserable or both.

That’s probably because Scorsese, who grew up in New York City and knows the culture intimately, brings a specificity to his crime movies that matches his well-known virtuosity behind a camera. He may have made more films about other subjects than he has about criminals, but he helped define the way we look at criminality on screen. And he keeps coming back to the subject, again and again, to refine his techniques and to approach similar topics from all-new angles.

Let’s take a look at all the Scorsese movies that can confidently be called “crime” films, and see how they stack up against each other, which ones are truly essential:

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