Film Review
Whilst it does a very good impression of a film that is in search of a
plot,
The Cincinnati Kid is a
surprisingly gripping and stylish piece of cinema, one which presages
the American counter-culture movement of the late 1960s, early
1970s. It has often been compared, usually unfavourably, with
Robert Rossen's
The Hustler
(1961), both films being the gambling room equivalent of the old
gunfighter western. Plot similarities aside, the two films are
stylistically quite different. In contrast to the sweaty
monochrome realism of
The Hustler,
The Cincinnati Kid has an
unsettling dreamlike quality and sometimes feels like a parody of a
glossy Hollywood feature.
After an almost painfully slow build-up, in which the two principal
characters (played to perfection by Steve McQueen and Edward G.
Robinson) are established, we finally arrive at the centre-piece card
game. Director Norman Jewison and his cinematographer Philip H.
Lathrop handle this with consummate skill and deliver one of the most
nail-biting pieces of cinema to come out of an American film
studio. You don't have to know anything about poker to be
completely hooked by the gripping McQueen-Robinson psychological duel, with Joan
Blondell providing a few fleeting moments of comic relief from the
almost unbearable tension. Yes, the film is badly lacking in
substance and could have benefited from a bit more in the way of
character detail, but this doesn't prevent
The Cincinnati Kid from being a
compulsive classic of its kind.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1930s New Orleans, Eric Stoner, nicknamed The Kid, has earned a
reputation as a formidable poker player. When he learns
that Lancey Howard, the reputed king of the game, is in town, Stoner
decides to take him on. Another gambler, Slade, hires Stoner's
friend Shooter as dealer at this high stakes contest. Slade is
desperate to have his revenge on Howard after he cleaned him out in a
previous poker game, so he blackmails Shooter into slipping Stoner a
few winning cards. When Stoner realises this, he dismisses
Shooter and another dealer takes his place. The Kid is confident
that he can beat Howard by his own skill and good fortune, perhaps too
confident...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.