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54 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The human condition.
Not just about gambling addiction, but the human weakness and addiction to greed. An incredible ensemble cast with mature interconnected plot lines that deal with love, sacrifice, forgiveness, despair, and happiness. Give this one try. I think you'll be superised.
Published on September 13, 2007 by T. E. Lawson

versus
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars a lesson in missing the mark...
When I saw this great ensemble cast I thought wow, it has to be decent; then a professional poker player recommended it. Okay I'll rent it. Wow. Very painful to watch. The biggest problem I could see is the writing; specifically the story lines are very weak and the dialogue between characters is absolutely awful. So many stereotypes and cliches. I did manage to make it...
Published on December 8, 2007 by J. Rubino


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54 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The human condition., September 13, 2007
By 
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
Not just about gambling addiction, but the human weakness and addiction to greed. An incredible ensemble cast with mature interconnected plot lines that deal with love, sacrifice, forgiveness, despair, and happiness. Give this one try. I think you'll be superised.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars a lesson in missing the mark..., December 8, 2007
By 
J. Rubino (Simi Valley,Ca USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
When I saw this great ensemble cast I thought wow, it has to be decent; then a professional poker player recommended it. Okay I'll rent it. Wow. Very painful to watch. The biggest problem I could see is the writing; specifically the story lines are very weak and the dialogue between characters is absolutely awful. So many stereotypes and cliches. I did manage to make it through the entire movie but was very disappointed overall. Kelsey Grammar is in the movie for about four minutes total and his is by far the worst performance of the bunch. Ray Liotta is passable as is Whittaker. Bassinger and DeVito are very mediocre which led me to conclude that the director is as much to blame as the writer. I would not watch it again and would not recommend it.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Charity event for highschool scriptwriters?, September 22, 2007
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
Easily in the running for worst film of the year. Not the best cast in the world can save this schoolmasterly predictable hundredth edition of the same old lame addiction and emotional abuse story collection.
What were they thinking, the Whitakers, Basingers, de Vitos, Liottas, Roths...? Probably nothing. Best that can happen for them is if nobody notices this piece of incompetence.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interlocking Tales of Various People Locked into Gambling Mindsets, September 14, 2007
By 
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
EVEN MONEY has somewhat the same manner of storytelling that made CRASH so impressive: many apparently disparate characters and stories, all related by the disease of gambling addiction, work in parallel time frames to a related conclusion. Director Mark Rydell (The Rose, On Golden Pond, Cinderella Liberty, The Reivers, The Fox, Intersections etc) has a firm hold on his material - a screenplay by newcomer Robert Tanner - and steers his large and very fine cast through a rapid sequence study of character types. For this viewer it works well.

Carol Carver (Kim Basinger) is a blocked novelist married to Professor Tom (Ray Liotta) who happens to spend her hours away from home and her duties as a wife and mother to teenage daughter Nicole (Carson Brown) at the local casino, gambling away her family's savings on the slot machines. She meets a down and out magician Walter (Danny DeVito) who convinces her to join him in a resurrection of his life as a famous artist. Carol's gambling addiction fractures her life. At the same time plumber Clyde Snow (Forest Whitaker), who worships his younger brother Godfrey Snow (Nick Cannon) for his prowess as an emerging basketball hero, and to escape his dangerous debt from gambling talks his brother into 'fixing' games to help him win back his losses and pay the collectors. The third gambling addict is Augie (Jay Mohr) who with his companion Murph (Grant Sullivan) runs a betting numbers game, a profitable business until Murph's infatuation with his girlfriend Veronica (Carla Gugino) consumes his attention. The tie-in factors among these people are the man behind the collections, a smarmy Victor (Tim Roth) who emerges at all the wrong times to distort their lives and hopes as looks out for his boss Ivan (Mark Rydell), and a strange crippled detective Brunner (Kelsey Grammer), and the ending of the film is tied together in a series of twists that surprise everyone.

Non-linear storytelling is not new, but in Rydell's handling of Tanner's script (and with a lot of help from some very fine actors!) it takes on a new dimension: the messages are not pretty but the souls and crushed dreams of the characters weld our attention. It is a film well worth watching. Grady Harp, September 07
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Bet against it, March 29, 2008
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
"I'm not perfect! Nobody's perfect!" That's one of the catchphrases of a gambling addict, and it's an ironic one, for a lot of them chase perfection in their chosen field of wagering. They believe in hot dice, cold cards, and working a certain slot in a certain corner of the casino. Some of them double as drug addicts or alcoholics, but all of them have taken their pursuit for a competitive high into that zone of desperation and fevered, last chance bets - the ones that will square them for good, or consign them to terminal poverty. These bliss/doom wagers are the addiction in full bloom. Nothing feels as good as escaping the grasp of ruin to bet another day.

"Even Money," a low-rent B-flick about gamblers, doesn't delve into that much detail. Rather, it's a sleazy, high-level view of a business that has its meat hooks in people and its fingers in a bunch of proverbial community pies. No doubt that's true, but since it's so riddled with cliches and archetypes that went stale after Raymond Chandler died, the movie is more inane than indicting.

Opening with some half-baked monologue from a crippled detective (Kelsey Grammer, ridiculous) about a man's wants in the world, Robert Tannen's screenplay presents a variety of addicts: Novelist Carol (Kim Basinger) is attracted to slots; a plumber named Clyde (Forest Whitaker) asks his basketball-playing brother (Nick Cannon) to shave a few points in an upcoming game; and Walter (Danny DeVito) is a pitiful washed up magician who befriends Carol for reasons never quite established. Throw in a couple small-time bookies (Jay Mohr and Grant Sullivan), a patient, suffering girlfriend (Carla Gugino), and a Eurotrash fixer (Tim Roth), and you've got yourself an ensemble soufflé!

Highlights? Not a ton. Well, Gugino's still beautiful. Ray Liotta stops by, and it's not to play a maniac or a cop, or a maniac cop. He and on-screen wife Basinger have a few good moments. There's some honor in the way Whitaker tackles his character, an antsy, loud type who's not quite as smart as he thinks he is - whose emotions are always a step ahead of his words. But the point-shaving subplot is simply botched - no coach who guesses a player is on the take is going to keep starting him.

Walter worms his way in and out of the movie without any discernible purpose, other than to kick up the pathos a few notches; DeVito can still act, but he's a pure cipher here. Roth borrows James Spader's playbook from "Two Days In The Valley" to no avail. Mohr's his typical, irritating self. Was it his idea to gulp his ulcer-soothing Pepto-Bismol throughout the movie? Couldn't it have at least been a generic brand?

Finally, for reasons unknown, Grammer not only tries on polio as a character trait, but a frog voice from the back of his throat, and giant prosthetic nose and chin. With a khaki trench coat and a pasted-on mustache, he looks and sounds like a Vegas Muppet cop. Where is this guy from? Who gave Grammer, a ham-and-egger if there ever was one, this kind of latitude in a supposedly serious film?

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars worthy of a rental., September 22, 2007
By 
Anthony Capialbi (Brooklyn, New York) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
The acting is strong here. Danny Devito is quite a captivating actor. Even Money is worth the price of a rental because you'll get your money's worth. Still, it seems like a B movie since it has no real blockbuster stars unless you think Kim and Ray are prime box office. Good script however and good moments of real drama. Here is a story of lost souls with gambling problems.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars "Crash" for the gambling set, March 12, 2008
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This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
**1/2

Despite its decidedly un-ambitious nature, "Even Money" is a modern film noir melodrama with more storylines and characters than Robert Altman's "Nashville." Kim Basinger, Danny DeVito, Ray Liotta, Kelsey Grammer, Forest Whitaker, Grant Sullivan, Jay Mohr, and Carla Gugino all play individuals whose only real connection is that they are in some way or another touched by the evils of gambling.

Robert Tannen's overstuffed screenplay wanders all over the map, forcing the actors to spend most of their time just trying to keep up with all the narrative permutations (no need to reiterate them here). The most ludicrous subplot features DeVito as a washed-up magician who contemplates a professional comeback by teaming up with the best-selling author and compulsive gambler played by Basinger. Individually, any of the various plot strands might have made for an interesting movie, but taken together, they just keep getting in each others' way.

Veteran filmmaker Mark Rydell has not only helmed the piece but appears in a crucial cameo role late in the film. Sad to say, he doesn't make much of an impact in either capacity.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Worth Viewing, January 13, 2008
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
Over the weekend, I watched Even Money. It reminded me of Crash in terms of how the movie flowed. There were four or five characters. The film revolved around each of their lives. The common element among them was gambling.

I read some of the reviews before watching the movie. Overall, the movie is worth renting. It is not great, but it is an okay movie.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Somewhat Interesting Storyline, December 17, 2007
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
While I don't consider this a candidate for any movie award, it does have strong performances by Basinger and Liotta. Both give this movie something that Devito could not do, act their roles. I recommend this movie only for their storyline.

I also liked Kelsey Grammer's detective role and makeup. He really appeared to become the character; while Devito was playing the same guy from Deck the Halls.

Watch this when there is nothing else to rent at the video store. However, I think buying it used from the Marketplace is cheaper.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Crapped Out, May 20, 2011
By 
This review is from: Even Money (DVD)
Forest Whitaker, Kim Basinger, Ray Liotta, Kelsey Grammar, Danny Devito, Carla Gugino. Sounds good already, right? Think again.

Several loosely based gambling plots get spun together and the odds of it being interesting or enjoyable are slightly less than hitting the lottery. Not a single actor performs poorly, but there was never the threat of Oscar glory coming from this pedestrian collaboration. Too many egos grasping for the headliner role is clearly the source of this film's demise. Whoever green-lighted such latitude for guys like Devito, Grammar, and Jay Mohr - who should quit acting, forever - should be chased out of Hollywood by pitbulls with herpes. And the pitchfork carrying men who hold the dogs' leashes should be the source of infection.

Keep your money. Unless you thought all the praise for Crash was deserved (hint: it wasn't), then push this aside when you're digging through the dollar DVD bin.
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Even Money
Even Money by Kim Basinger (DVD - 2007)
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