Casino (film)

Info and Spolier

Casino is a 1995 movie directed by Martin Scorsese, based on the book of the same name by Nicholas Pileggi and Larry Shandling. Robert De Niro stars as Sam "Ace" Rothstein, a top gambling handicapper who is called by the Mob to oversee the day to day operations at the fictional Tangiers Casino in Las Vegas. The story is based on Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal, who ran the Stardust, Fremont and the Hacienda casinos in Las Vegas for The Mob from the 1970s until the early 1980s.

Joe Pesci plays Nicky Santoro, based on the real life Anthony "Tony the Ant" Spilotro, an intimidating enforcer for the Chicago Outfit. Santoro is sent to Vegas by the bosses to make sure money from the Tangiers is skimmed off the top and the casinos and mobsters in Vegas are kept in line. Sharon Stone plays Rothstein's wife, the self-obsessed, spoiled, devious and sly Ginger, a role that earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.

Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow

Robert De Niro as Sam "Ace" Rothstein.

Spanning over a decade in Las Vegas, the film is the adaptation of Casino, the true crime account of the lives of mob associates Frank Rosenthal (renamed Sam "Ace" Rothstein for the movie), Tony "The Ant" Spilotro (renamed Nicholas "Nicky" Santoro), Joseph Aiuppa (Remo Gaggi) and Frank Culotta (Frank Marino). Rothstein, Santoro and Marino narrate the film.

Ace is entrusted by the leaders of the Chicago Outfit, led by Gaggi from Chicago, Illinois, to manage a Las Vegas casino (the Tangiers) they have financed via a Teamsters' Pension Fund and send them skimmed profits. Ace's friend Nicky shows up later (he was first sent to Vegas by Gaggi to keep an eye on Ace and to, more or less, "protect" him) and starts working for himself. While Ace appears to be a kind hearted gentleman, Nicky is the polar opposite: an amoral psychopath who will not hesitate to kill anyone he sees as a threat. In one scene, after Nicky is asked by Gaggi to protect Ace, Nicky stabs a man in the neck with a pen multiple times solely for insulting Ace then mocks the man's whimpers. His cruelty also comes to the surface at another point when he takes his anger out on a casino manager, Billy Sherbert (Don Rickles) and hits him in the face with a telephone, calling him a "Jew fuck". Ace's gangster side is also shown in a few scenes, especially in one where he spots two cheaters and has the security guards brutally punish one of them by breaking his right hand with a hammer.


Sam and Ginger.Ace and Nicky's relationship meets its biggest test when a woman named Ginger McKenna (based on Geraldine McGee) comes to Ace's life. After dating for a few months they have a daughter and get married, Ace having insisted on having the child first to ensure Ginger's commitment to him. All seems well until Ace catches Ginger sneaking around with her old pimp boyfriend, Lester Diamond (based on Lenny Marmor). Ginger's relationship with Diamond goes back to when she was age 14. Ace and Nicky have their men beat Diamond, but it doesn't stop him. Ginger and Diamond eventually kidnap the daughter, Amy, and flee for Los Angeles, making plans to escape to Europe. However, Ace tracks them down and convinces Ginger to bring Amy back home.

Though not satisfied, Ace accepts Ginger back in the house, but that night, he catches Ginger speaking on the phone, asking someone to assassinate her husband. Furious, Ace hangs the phone up and literally throws her out of the house. She returns later on, but Ace has an even harder time accepting her back. His narration states he allowed her back in the house particularly for being the mother of his daughter, someone whom he needed.

Now wanting to leave Rothstein with her money and Persian jewelry, Ginger seduces the one man who will help her: Nicky. They begin an affair, which could land them all killed by Gaggi (Nicky is a made-man, and sleeping with an associate's wife is against the made-man code). At one point, Gaggi asks Nicky's right-hand man, Frankie Marino, about the rumours of the affair, but Marino deliberately lies to Gaggi to protect Nicky, despite knowing that his discretion could get him killed too.

The breaking point occurs when Ace and Nicky have a falling out over Nicky's reckless criminal activities and the unwanted attention they receive from the police. Worried for his friend, Ace tries to convince Nicky to keep a lower profile, but he will not listen. It is only after Nicky threatens a stock market manager that Ace realizes Nicky's true goal: to take over the casino empire by overthrowing Remo Gaggi.

Ace returns home one night to find his daughter Amy tied to the bedposts - by Ginger. Ace then receives a call from Nicky, who claims that Ginger is at his restaurant with him. Furious upon realizing this, Ace rushes to the restaurant and confronts Ginger, warning her she not abuse their daughter again, he will murder her. Ace forces her out, but she angrily goes back to the restaurant after they get home.

Ginger blames Nicky for the mess, while Nicky tells her it is she who is at fault. Ginger begs Nicky to kill Ace, but Nicky angrily refuses, having been Ace's best friend for 35 years. When Nicky tells Ginger that he won't be able to get her money now, Ginger attacks Nicky. Nicky then shows his brutal nature and mercilessly throws her out of the restaurant with help from Marino.

The next day, Ginger goes to Ace's home and demands that he give her the share of the money and her jewelry. When she arrives, she repeatedly smashes her car into Ace's car several times, prompting nearby neighbors to call the police. Ginger causes a scene in front of Ace's house and when the police arrive, she demands that they help her enter the house. Ace says he will permit her inside for a few moments to gather some clothes. Ginger sneaks into Ace's office and breaks into his desk, stealing the key to the safe deposit box where most of their cash is stored. At the bank, Ginger collects a large amount of cash from the box and drives off, where federal agents then follow and pull her over and she is arrested on charges of aiding and abetting.


Nicky in his final moments, betrayed by his own crew.Ginger's arrest begins the crumbling of the casino empire. The big bosses (Gaggi, Forlano, Capelli and Borelli) decide to murder anybody who could incriminate them. They kill an associate, Andy Stone (head of the Central States Teamsters Union Pension Fund), three casino executives, and the money courier John Nance who was hiding out in Costa Rica. (Nance's son was already in trouble with the FBI on drug charges; the bosses decided to execute Nance to prevent his potentially testifying in court to protect his son.) Returning to the opening scene of the film, Ace himself is nearly killed by a car bomb, but he suspects a attempt on his life was not ordered by the bosses.

Ultimately Nicky and his brother Dominick are severely beaten with bats and buried alive in a cornfield in Indiana. By this time the bosses have had enough of Nicky, so states Ace while narrating, as both are buried while still breathing. Marino participates in the beating of the Santoro brothers, claiming he has had enough of their dirty work, though he still feels a little bad while watching the Santoros' burial. This is the scene in which Nicky's narration ceases for good, as Nicky is hit in the back by Marino. Ginger sinks deeper into drug addiction and eventually dies from a drug overdose, alone and destitute. In his narration, Ace states that the pimps, lowlifes, junkies, and bikers with whom Ginger had fallen in had shot her up with a "hot dose" of drugs in order to kill her. In the end, all that remained of Ginger's money was "$3,600 in mint condition coins."

The film finishes with a voiceover by Ace explaining that the Tangiers is levelled, along with all the older, classic casinos and are replaced with bigger, modern, junk bond funded, corporate run affairs. Ace also explains the quaint, friendly feeling of Las Vegas has been replaced by a greedier, more apathetic one. Ace returns to his work as a sports handicapper for the mob, as he can still pick winners.

Ray Liotta was considered for the roles of both Phillp Green and Lester Diamond


Differences between fact and fiction
The character of Frank Marino (played by Frank Vincent and based on Frank Cullotta) participates in a killing of the Santoro brothers. In reality, Frank Cullotta was not present and played no part in the beating of the Spilotro brothers (on whom the Santoro brothers were based), and only betrayed them by testifying against them about the M & M murders when Anthony Spilotro ordered him killed over the phone.
The character of John Nance, based on George Vandermark, is murdered in the film with two gunshots to the stomach and one to the head and left in open view. The real George Vandermark was murdered along with his drug addict son, Jeffrey, but his body was never found.
In the film, Artie Piscano (based on Carl Deluna) dies of a heart attack during an FBI raid on his home. In reality, Deluna was arrested and tried, and is still alive as of 2007.
The Tangiers Casino, based on the Stardust Resort & Casino, is shown to be leveled at the end of the movie, in real life, the Stardust Casino was not leveled until March 2007.
In the movie, it is made clear Ginger and Lester have never married, though the real life Geri has taken the Marmor name from the real life Lester, insinuating they are indeed/have been married.


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