High Roller - The Stu Ungar Story
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Average customer review:Product Description
Based on a true story, Michael Imperioli stars as poker legend, Stu Ungar. A gambler by the age of 10, Ungar won millions playing card games. He was one of two people ever to win the World Series of Poker three times - twice before age 26. But, in spite of his success, a life of excess and addiction left him in tremendous debt and could only end in tragedy.
DVD Features:
Audio Commentary:Feature-length commentary with Michael Imperioli, director A.W. Vidmer and poker expert Vince Van Patten
Music Video:Music video "Yesterday" by Marc Eric
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #31285 in DVD
- Brand: Warner Brothers
- Released on: 2005-03-15
- Rating: R (Restricted)
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Formats: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Subtitled in: English, Spanish
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
- Running time: 110 minutes
Features
- Based on a true story, Michael Imperioli stars as poker legend, Stu Ungar. A gambler by the age of 10, Ungar won millions playing card games. He was one of two people ever to win the World Series of Poker three times - twice before age 26. But, in spite of his success, a life of excess and addiction left him in tremendous debt and could only end in tragedy.Running Time: 110 min. Format: DVD MOV
Customer Reviews
Really captures the magic and the dark side of gambling
This one really shows the mystique, the sense of destiny and the desire to court Lady Luck that lures so many to the gambling table. Stu Unger was someone who simply couldn't resist the urge to play with destiny and make his own fate. And the guy could read a cardplayer's "body language" like few others...he truly was a legend.
His life story makes for one heck of a movie, giving viewers a chance to experience the joys and sorrows of those big wins, to imagine "what if?" and to marvel at the guy who broke all those records winning in Las Vegas. Unger broke the mold but was also beset by personal demons.
It makes for a wild ride, marvelously directed and with a fine ensemble of actors, including two regulars from The Sopranos television show (and maybe one or two more from the show that I missed along the way).
Better than most casino movies
Fans of HBO's "The Sopranos" and Martin Scorsese's "Casino" will enjoy "High Roller - The Stu Ungar Story", a story about the rise and fall of real life gambler Stu Ungar.
"Sopranos" lieutenant Michael Imperioli plays the lead role in this biopic. He is nothing special in the role, which apparently was supposed to portray a much younger man -- one that would be carded in a bar. Imperioli shows affinity for the ultimate loser but also shows his lack of breadth as an actor by playing the same role he plays in "The Sopranos". The producers lose some creidibility by never changing his appearance whether its 1978, 1989 or 1996.
Alumni from both "The Sopranos" and "Casino" play significant roles in this flick. One from each plays Imperioli's best buddies. Michael Nouri does some of the best work of his career in a one-dimensional role as mentor to the young Ungar, whose profligate talent as a cardshark appears as a boy of single digit years. Another actor plays the young Stu Ungar, a boy typically at odds with his father. That kid did a better job in the role than Imperioli, in my opinion.
But it's the story that's the clincher here, not the acting or players. And that follows young Stu from his earliest days in a household dominated by a strong father figure, to his high life as a Gin Rummy player, to his marriage and fatherhood years in Las Vegas, to his ultimate decline and death at an early age.
The story is always interesting and involving. In particular, this story is better crafted than two bigger budget casino flicks of recent years, the ridiculously-plotted "The Cooler" and the slick but superficial remake of 1960's "Ocean's 11". Neither of those films shows the humanity on display in "High Roller", whose basis in real life is obviously its strongest selling point on celluloid.
So rent, buy or borrow this movie if you like gambling, casino or human studies on film and settle in for a two-hour view into another life and another world, one far from the planet most of us inhabit.
Worth Watching
Good movie which outlines Stu Ungar's life story as a poker and gin rummy player.
What I liked:
I enjoyed finding out about Stu Ungars personal life.
I enjoyed the small poker scenes of the world series event that were re created. Although some of the other poker scenes in the movie were a little bit far fetched and not done properly.
I would have enjoyed the movie more if there was more poker and gin rummy footage.
As I said worth a watch and if you like Stu Ungar you should definetely watch this movie.
ps There is some very difficult moments in the movie where you watch Stu Ungar flush his whole bank roll on sports betting, booze, drugs and women. The footage is very real and the directors did a great job in re creating those moments.
The other thing I found is that you enjoy watching the movie more after the first time you watch it. Usually after the third time you watch the movie you will appreciate it more.




