Las
Vegas & The Movies by: Iulia
Pascanu Sunny Las Vegas hosted hundreds
of movies or movie-scenes. Some of them
got the Oscar. Others got lost on the way.
But Vegas surely remains a classic attraction
for film-makers since the glory of the Rat
Pack days.
To be completely fair, the early 60's weren't
really the first screen action days in Las
Vegas. Frank Sinatra's first movie, Las
Vegas Nights was set back in 1941. However,
the Rat Pack Days are always a good point
to start.
The Rat Packs
Five gentlemen in Las Vegas: Sammy Davis
Jr, Peter Lawford, Dean Martin, Joey Bishop
and Frank Sinatra. Good friends. Loved to
party. And of course, they had their own
favourite place to hang out, that was Sands
Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas (which was
demolished in 1996, nowadays the site of
the Venitian).
The Rat Pack Days begun in late 50's, somewhat
as a reaction to the Cold War early days;
the guys came up with the ideea of having
their own "summit of cool" in
Las Vegas; it lasted seven years. As the
Sands performing scene wasn't enough for
them, the mighty five moved further to movies
and recordings.
The seven years brought out seven films:
Some Came Running, Ocean's 11, Sergents
3, 4 For Texas, Robin and the 7 Hoods, Marriage
on the Rocks, and Cannonball Run II. Ocean's
11 (1960) is the most famous one, and also
benefited from a modern remake (2001), starring
George Clooney, Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts.
The action in new Ocean's 11 involves robbery
scenes at Bellagio. The Rat Pack, released
in 1998 for cable TV, includes scenes from
The Sands.
The King
The good old days gave us the classic Viva
Las Vegas (1964), featuring Elvis Presley,
who sings his heart out for the beloved
"sin city".
Later, in 1970, the King starred a documentary
filmed at the International Hotel, nowadays
Las Vegas Hilton (Elvis: That's the Way
It Is).
The 1979 Elvis, a memorabilia to The King,
stars Kurt Russell. The story goes on in
1988 with Elvis and Me, inspired by Priscilla
Presley's autobiography. The 1995 BBC documentary
The Burger and the King: The Life and Cuisine
of Elvis Presley seems to have closed the
Elvis & Las Vegas series, up to this
moment.
Casino
This one, released in 1995, is the classic.
It approaces "sin city" the way
nobody dared before. The story is based
on the almost fabulous life of Frank Rosendhale
(impersonated by Robert de Niro), the best
handicapper of all times, and his beautifull
wife Gery (impersonated by Sharon Stone).
Las Vegas made them rich and television
made them famous.
"Casino" hit the box-offices,
but Frank said director Martin Scorsese
brought the spotlights on his own chopped
vision of Las Vegas; blamed him that he
was not really interested to either understand
casinos or be faithful to the real story;
thus, Frank Rosenthale would have told it
differently.
The Winner
Las Vegas footage has proven a good luck
charm for Francis Ford Coppola's famous
nephew, Nicholas Cage. He started with Honeymoon
in Vegas in 1992, grabbed an Oscar on the
road with Leaving Las Vegas and made a come-back
with Con Air in 1997; literally, Nick Cage
forced his landing on the Hard Rock Hotel
guitar...
Just another subjective list
- 1971 - Diamonds Are Forever, from the
James Bond (Sean Connery) series
- 1974 - The Godfather Part II
- The Rocky series (parts III and IV)
included brief glimpses from Las Vegas
- 1987 - Heat, 100% Las Vegas made, starring
Burt Reynolds
- 1988 - Rain Man, with Dustin Hoffman,
action set mostly inside Caesars Palace
- 1991 - Bugsy, the story of Bugsy Siegel
and the making of the Flamingo. Casts
Warren Beatty and Annette Bening
- 1993 - Indecent Proposal. Some reviews
advice to "save the money for slots"
- 1995 - Heat, this time starring Robert
DeNiro and Al Pacino, the only movie the
two "monsters" have met
- 1995 - Showgirls, mostly a movie about...
girls, including many scenes at Stardust
About The Author
Iulia Pascanu writes for
http://www.bestlasvegashotels.info
where you can find more information
about the best hotels in Las Vegas.
Please feel free to use this article
in your Newsletter or on your website.
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