It's good for a little engaging diversion, provided you find casual self-destructiveness, foul language and the occasional brutal beating diverting.
Poolhall Junkies (2003)
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Reviews Counted:44
Fresh:15
Rotten:29
Average Rating:4.6/10
Theatrical Release:Feb 28, 2003 Limited
Box Office: $504,507
Synopsis: Pool hustling isn't everything it used to be, but it's still all about the cash. Joe (Chazz Palminteri) a shady pool hustler well-past his prime, is obsessed with the game and the cash and is... Pool hustling isn't everything it used to be, but it's still all about the cash. Joe (Chazz Palminteri) a shady pool hustler well-past his prime, is obsessed with the game and the cash and is willing to use anyone to get what he wants -- especially his young protégé Johnny (Mars Callahan). In the tradition of The Hustler, Gold Circle Films presents a Mars Callahan film, the story of a young pool shark who shoots lights out and wants to become a professional pool player. Joe is convinced that Johnny moves the rock (the cue ball) better than the best hustlers ever did, but Johnny's dreams are a cut above this life and senses that Joe is holding him back. After fifteen years playing Joe's angles, Johnny's sick of the con and wants to leave the hustle behind. After discovering Joe’s underhanded and self-serving manipulations Johnny finally has the guts to leave Joe. But "payback's a bitch" and Joe won't be taken so easily. On his own, Johnny quickly discovers the tedium of the "real" world and a life without pool. After trudging to work at a series of loser day jobs, Johnny is miserable and bored, and itches to have his cue in hand again. Through his law student girlfriend, Tara (Alison Eastwood), who loves Johnny but not the games he plays, he meets wealthy lawyer Mike (Christopher Walken) who becomes a fan of Johnny's game. Without Joe in his life, Johnny's "family" consists of the guys he knows from his favorite pool hall "Hardtimes" and its proprietor Nick ( Rod Steiger). Hungry for action, he finds himself spending most of his time there. Central to the pool hall is his younger brother Danny (Michael Rosenbaum) who, along with an entourage of good-for-laughs-die-for-you best friends, is attempting to follow in Johnny's footsteps. Meanwhile Joe is bent on revenge for Johnny's defiance and now he has a new protégé Brad (Rick Schroder), who is just as good, if not better than Johnny. Joe's got his eye on hustling Danny and his friends. Soon, Brad and Danny are playing a high-stakes game of pool ending with Danny owing Joe a huge sum of money, with no way to pay him. Desperate for cash, Danny enacts a heist to pay off Joe, but everything goes wrong and soon Johnny finds his brother in jail. With options and time running out, Johnny must make a final stand against his former mentor, Joe and the result is a "race to nine" showdown with Brad "the pro". The stakes are high -- with Johnny’s future, Mike's bankroll, Danny's bail money, and of course, the "love of a good woman" all on the table! -- © Gold Circle Films [More]
Starring: Chazz Palminteri, Rick Schroder, Christopher Walken, Rod Steiger
Starring: Chazz Palminteri, Rick Schroder, Christopher Walken, Rod Steiger, Michael Rosenbaum, Mars Callahan, Allison Eastwood
Director: Mars Callahan
Director: Mars Callahan
Screenwriter: Chris Corso, Mars Callahan
Producer: Tucker Tooley, Vincent Newman, Karen Beninati
Composer: Richard Glasser
Studio: Samuel Goldwyn Films
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Reviews for Poolhall Junkies
When Christopher Walken saunters into Poolhall Junkies, he kicks it from so-so to worthwhile.
A brassy bit of entertainment that makes up in hard-boiled showmanship what it lacks in subtlety.
With some noteworthy pool shots; and some Hustler sized plotting thrown in, Martin's film is quite a watch.
Though there's not much in Poolhall Junkies we haven't seen many times before, the film manages to remain mostly entertaining due mostly to some surprisingly effective performances and a brisk pace.
The fast-paced picture sizzles with energy, and it’s a tour de force for Mars Callahan, who co-wrote and directed.
I haven't enjoyed a cheesy, over-acted B-movie as much since Eddie And The Cruisers.
The movie does feature enough amiable characters to keep you interested throughout and even more so if you're a fan of pool.
The snappy dialogue and cool characters provide enough pure entertainment to make this is a fun flick.
Brassy and energetic, first-time director Mars Callahan's vividly photographed ode to the seductive allure of professional sharking succeeds in making the game seem genuinely kinetic and thrilling.
A lowlife billiards drama that lacks the drive and edginess of the classic The Hustler, Poolhall Junkies does get by on its humor, energy and earnest charm.
Is this a great movie? Not at all. Is it more or less consistently entertaining? Yes.
This film seems destined to join the ranks of such 'classics' as Showgirls, Rock Star, and other debacles that are so atrociously campy that they end up being fun to watch.
You'll have to endure scattershot subplots, flat acting and brainless guy-speak banter if you want to hang with these Junkies.
The result is by no means the embarrassment that many such offerings from unjustifiably vain actor-auteurs have been, but nor does it present much of anything new or compelling to demand one's attention.
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