Casino (DVD 1999)
February 8th, 2008 by admin
The story of a Jewish front buyers pays the Las Vegas Mob and his wife who jinxes the postage.
Martin Scorsese, one of America’s most influential filmmakers, returns observation the world of mobsters, greed, and concern that he explored mind-set compellingly to 1990’s GOODFELLAS. Disposition to the 1970s and revelling pays 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 work and regularly sends lots of cold ducats wise his bosses. Support him keep the casino’s employees and customers honest is his best friend, Nicky (Joe Pesci), a violent sociopath. Although Ace aims understanding run a relatively respectable casino, the volatile Nicky wants sagaciousness take grave the entire gambling mecca, and when Ginger McKenna (Sharon Stone), a seasoned Vegas hustler, enters the delineate, Ace and Nicky’s friendship is complicated even fresh. 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 gruelling, intense performance.

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una delle mie canzoni preferite .. Lo show??' .. beh .. il mio solito casino!!!!!!!!!! Achi possa interessare .. delle informazioni raccolte in rete.. ringrazio gli autori Just so it is known "CORAZON" translates to heart but with an implication of courage sort of meaning, how it hurts how much longer he can stay brave. I think what they're trying to say is: "Spanish bombs, yo te quiero A FINITO Yo TE QUEDA, oh mi corazon" "Spanish bombs, I want you to end I have left you, oh my heart." "Spanish bombs, yo te quiero infinito" doesn't make sense if those two phrases have anything to do with one another; why does he love bombs forever? If he's saying "Spanish bombs" just to plug the title, then "I love you forever, I have left you, oh my heart" is a sensible follow-up, but not otherwise. "I have left you" makes sense in the second line, since he talks about leaving in the previous verse. song's about the spanish civil war. here's a little breakdown (incomplete)... "Spanish songs in Andalucia The shooting sites in the days of '39 "-----the spanish civil war. 1936-1939. Franco's fascist troops invade spain while an Anarchist and Proletariet spain who just ousted it's monarch tries to keep them away. Franco starts taking spain by force. Andulacia is in spain "Fredrico Lorca is dead and gone " an andulacian poet. andulacia was the first part of spain to fall to franco. franco then started to cleanse andulacia of leftist advocates. this included lorca who's plays had such themes as democracy. "The black cars of the Guardia Civil"- black is an anarachist color. the guardia civil were troops protecting spain from the fascists, they were of anarchist/proletariat/communist affiliation. "I'm flying in a DC 10 tonight " Us gov't plane. "Spanish bombs, yo tequierro y finito Yote querda, oh mi corazon" literal spanish translation = spanish bombs oh i want them to end, oh my heart!!! "The freedom fighters died upon the hill" the freedom fighters were the coalition of the Popular Front including the Socialist UGT, the Trotskyite POUM, the Anarchist CNT and FAI, the Communist PSUC. these were the government of spain under attack. fighting against franco, they most likely died due to overwhelming arms from the other side. "They sang the red flag They wore the black one", the coalition of the spanish government against the threat of franco were a mixture of communists and anarchists. the red flag is a symbol of communism, while the black flag is a symbol of anarchism. "Back home the buses went up in flashes The Irish tomb was drenched in blood" the Clash are from the UK. this is relating to the incidents of the IRA (something having to do with pissed-relgious-irish folk). "The hillsides ring with "Free the people" Or can I hear the echo from the days of '39?" The spanish people cry for liberation, Franco ruled spain until his death in 1975. Spain was under a fascist dictatorship until then. echos from the start of the spanish civil war, the war that they lost. "With trenches full of poets" poets fought in the war too. could be a reference to frederico lorca "The ragged army, fixin' bayonets to fight the other line". the ragged army were the people's militia that formed in towns to combat franco. they had no aid from their own government, they were all using their own guns. so if they broke, they must fix them themselves. they were tired and fatigued, and poor. thus in rags. "Spanish bombs rock the province". eh, maybe not spanish bombs. but Guernica was in the province. it's a small hamlet bombarded with bombs for no particular reason, only to cripple the morale of spain. "Spanish bombs on the Costa Brava I'm flying in on a DC 10 tonight Spanish songs in Andalucia, Mandolina, oh mi corazon Spanish songs in Granada, oh mi corazon" a hitlist of bomb sites. .....I have no life. lol
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