The Cincinnati Kid

DVD : The Cincinnati Kid

The Cincinnati Kid

starring: Steve McQueen, Ann-Margret, Edward G. Robinson, Karl Malden, Tuesday Weld
directed by: Norman Jewison



 : The Cincinnati Kid
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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Warner Brothers
EAN: 9780790795690
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 0790795698
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2005-05-31
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: 1965-10-15



Editorial Review:

DescriptionSteve McQueen brings his cool fire to the role of the Cincinnati Kid, a small-timer eager to take his chances in high-stakes poker. He gets his chance. Regal, ruthless Lancey Howard (Edward G. Robinson), the elite gambler called the Man, accepts the Kid?s challenge. Norman Jewison (In the Heat of the Night, Moonstruck) directs this taut exploration of back-room gaming, building suspense with each turn of a card. And Ann-Margret, Karl Malden, Rip Torn, National Board of Review Best Supporting Actress Award winner Joan Blondell and many more comprise a full house of talent. Grab a chair and ante up.

DVD Features:Audio Commentary:Commentary by Director Norman Jewison Scene specific commentary with David Foley and Phil Gordon, the hosts of Bravo's Celebrity Poker ShowdownFeaturette:Vintage Featurette: The Cincinnati Kid Plays According to Hoyle

















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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - a poker classic
Everything about this movie is great. First, the characters are three dimensional. They're believable and interesting. The story is well-focused and always entertaining. Steve McQueen is great. The ending is both somewhat suprising (yet logical and forelorned) and trite.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A royal flush of tough and realistic confrontation!
The town is New Orleans; the place is the old Hotel Lafayette; the game is 5 Card Stud Poker...

"The Cincinnati Kid" is a colorful drama of the adventures of a young card-shark in New Orleans, battling for supremacy in the side-street world of gambling against an old pro of the game...

Steve McQueen plays the cool, strong challenger, a young clever stud poker gambler, ready to risk his whole world on the turn of a card...

Edward G. Robinson portrays the tougher old man not ready to retire yet... The greatest stud poker player in New York, Chicago, Miami with an awful lot past to protect...'The Man' who can laid you out, strung you up, gutted you easy!

Karl Malden plays the disturbed dealer who has reached his middle years without having yet any assurance... He is well prepared to supply the Kid with some 'helping' hands...

Ann-Margret plays a sensual married woman who cheats at everything, and hates to spend the rest of her life with a man like Malden... Her character, Melba, is the sort of woman who got a man if she went after him and could walk out of the room after his girlfriend walks in and discovers them together, guilt free... She shows the character played by Tuesday Weld around the French Quarter, introducing her to the wild side. But for all her urbane sophistication, Melba is still searching for love in vain...

Tuesday Weld plays the sweet country girl in love...

Joan Blondell is the relief dealer whose only hope is to see the 'Man' finished!

If you like pressure and tension, and you love the atmosphere of professional poker marathon game, and you enjoyed "The Hustler" with Paul Newman and Jackie Gleason, well, don't even hesitate to see this fascinating exhibition of professional characters competing for supremacy...

With a theme song sung by Ray Charles, this suspenseful motion picture is a royal flush of tough and realistic confrontation!





Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - "You better write yourself another book, Daddy!"
This was a good movie. Very entertaining. There are two things that I will remember about "The Cincinnati Kid": One is the presence of Ann-Margret and I was saying "Oh my God!" to myself about how hot she was. So hot that I was looking for a bottle of Tabasco sauce to drink. The other is Edward G. Robinson's character Lance Howard. What a sick [...] his character was (he sports probably the worst goatee or fu manchu ever by any actor) and as the poker showdown progressed I knew that he was going to win because his oppoinets knew in return that this was an exibition to show how he could kick anyone's behind. Take for example the scene in which The Pig (Jack Weston) quits and he looks at Howard like he wants to kill him because he knows that it is fixed. That leads me to my review's title that is spoken by Cab Calloway (of all people) in which he says this just as he too is about to quit and with the same feelings: Lance Howard has an unfair advantage. The best part of the DVD was the audio commentary from the hosts of "Celebrity Poker Showdown" and they mention that had the card been anything other than an Jack for Howard, Irving "The Cincinnati Kid" Stone (Steve McQueen) would have won with his full house but he couldn't with a straight flush. And that leads to Robinson saying the line that summed up the movie: "You're good kid. But your only second best as long as I'M around!"



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - The Challenge of Eric Stoner
Stud Poker has always been as American as Hot Dogs and Coca-Cola. There is a comfortable, sophisticated and mystical feel to the stories which deal with gamblers. From the cool jazzy world of New Orleans, comes the story of Eric Stoner (Steve McQueen) who believes he has got what it takes to beat "The Man" (Edward G. Robinson, in one of his finest roles) known as Lancy Howard. The stakes are much higher than the poker pots they play to win. For Eric, there is the fame and prestige of being called 'The Man', the very best when it comes to playing cards. Even his girl-friend is second in the ambitious rise of the talented poker player. The 'Man' on the other hand has a formidable reputation to safeguard, whilst the 'Kid" has youth, vitality and considerable skill to possibly unseat the one individual who hold court over the green felt world of cards. In a marathon-like winner-take-all, the two fathom the other's resolve. With the memorable talents of Karl Malden as Shooter, Rip Torn as William Slade, Jack Weston as Pig, Cab Calloway as Yeller, Ann-Margret as Melba and Tuesday Weld as Christian, the film evolves into a classic from sheer star power. ****



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - classic poker film set in New Orleans
OK, first of all, I live in New Orleans and I play poker. This is a movie about playing poker in New Orleans, so naturally, I eventually came across this film. I really enjoyed it, but would agree that it is not the best movie ever. The scenes of New Orleans are great. The poker is so-so. It is all 5 card stud, a game no longer played. A nice treat was the feature commentary by Phil Gordon who has a few insights on "making the fish as uncomfortable as possible". Also there is a featurette about how to cheat at cards and trick shuffling by a pro that is impressive. Every poker player should watch this movie if only to get the references to it that pop up over and over again (see first few pages of Dan Harrington's tournement stategy book (forget which volume)).



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The Cincinnati Kid

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