Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Philip Baker Hall | ... | Sydney | |
John C. Reilly | ... | John | |
Gwyneth Paltrow | ... | Clementine | |
Samuel L. Jackson | ... | Jimmy | |
F. William Parker | ... | Hostage | |
Philip Seymour Hoffman | ... | Young Craps Player (as Phillip Seymour Hoffman) | |
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Nathanael Cooper | ... | Restroom Attendant |
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Wynn White | ... | Waitress |
Robert Ridgely | ... | Keno Bar Manager | |
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Kathleen Campbell | ... | Keno Girl |
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Michael J. Rowe | ... | Pit Boss |
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Peter D'Allesandro | ... | Bartender |
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Steve Blane | ... | Stickman |
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Xaleese | ... | Cocktail Waitress |
Melora Walters | ... | Jimmy's Girl |
John has lost all his money. He sits outside a diner in the desert when Sydney happens along, buys him coffee, then takes him to Reno and shows him how to get a free room without losing much money. Under Sydney's fatherly tutelage, John becomes a successful small-time professional gambler, and all is well, until he falls for Clementine, a cocktail waitress and sometimes hooker. Written by Jon Reeves <jreeves@imdb.com>
Philip Baker Hall's Sidney kept me riveted from the first scene to the last. He play the mesmerizing, enigmatic title character with rare mastery and grace. The supporting characters are no slouches either. John C. Reilly is marvelous as Sidney's sweet, if somewhat slow witted protege. Samuel Jackson could have easily coasted on this one, simply repeating a performance from any of a number of previous tough guy types. Instead he creates an entirely new character, one with a reptilian quality not seen in his usual thugs. Even Gwenyth Paltrow is unusually strong as Clem, the waitress who wants it understood that, even if she sometimes sleeps with men for money, she is definitely NOT a prostitute.
I've been a fan of PT Anderson for a while now, and this film gave me new insight into why it is I like him so much. Anderson is that great rarity in modern filmmaking, an actor's director. He gathers terrific actors and inspires them to career-topping performances. There's no fiendishly complex plot here, no nailbiting suspense, no big payoff at the end. Just marvelous actors making the most of an excellent script.