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Four Dogs Playing Poker

Four Dogs Playing Poker

List Price: $19.98
Your Price: $17.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Movie!
Review: Four Dogs Playing Poker was a very suspenseful film. Casting as very terrific and it was wonderful that every single one of them can act! Although I am a huge John Taylor fan and was quite disappointed that he didn't get more lines in the film.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tim steals the show
Review: Great movie...in my personal opinion it was completely under-rated. I hadn't even heard of it until a couple of months ago.
Tim steals the show...despite the fact that he dies considerably early. Why is it that he dies in every damn movie? There's something about his English accent that exudes sensuality, and for an older man he is extremely attractive...but to each his own, I'm sure there are those that would disagree with me. Go rent or buy this movie today...you won't regret it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Awsome Flick!
Review: I just happoned to stumble upon this movie one day after class, and was immeadiatly captured by it. The storyline was intriguing, the actors were suburb, and the ending surprised me. Now whenever I catch it on TV again, I have to watch it! Definatly a must see on a rainy night!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Awsome Flick!
Review: I just happoned to stumble upon this movie one day after class, and was immeadiatly captured by it. The storyline was intriguing, the actors were suburb, and the ending surprised me. Now whenever I catch it on TV again, I have to watch it! Definatly a must see on a rainy night!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Tim's a hottie...but he dies
Review: I knew going into this movie that Tim Curry dies (poor guy, he always dies), but this was a very gruesome death. Too bad becasue Felix was a cutie! The rest of the movie, in my opinion, is pretty cool. Yes, it's confusing @ first, but a second watch clears a lot up. Of course everyone's entitled to their own opinions. :-)

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Review of John Taylor's Role in Four Dogs Playing Poker
Review: John Nigel Taylor as listed in the credits is in the
movie, playing a "hitman" so to speak. The movie is
about 5 people who steal a valuable art piece from
Argentina and ship it back to Los Angeles only to
learn that the art piece is allegedly not on the boat
they put it on.

Enter the person to whom it was to be delivered to,
Mr. Ellington and his two hitmen, Dick (J. Taylor) and Tom ... John doesn't say anything in his first scene, but portrays
a hitman with his snarling face and gun pointed at
Kevin's head. The story furthers, with the main characters having to owe Mr. Ellington one million dollars if he doesn't get the art piece, which is due to arrive in 5 days.

John does finally talk however, and you get a close-up
of him biting a slice of cheese pizza and even
sniffing his jacket. His scenes although short, were
very well acted, I mean the idea of "sweet & innocent"
John Nigel Taylor playing a mean hitman, if you can
believe it, is something that you have to act on, and
he did it well. My disappointment is not in his
acting but in his role. I felt that his character was
underplayed, and underwritten. Although he wasn't a
main character, I think he could have had a few more
scenes and definitely a better script. But if you are
a die-hard JT fan, then by all means get the film.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Review of John Taylor's Role in Four Dogs Playing Poker
Review: John Nigel Taylor as listed in the credits is in the
movie, playing a "hitman" so to speak. The movie is
about 5 people who steal a valuable art piece from
Argentina and ship it back to Los Angeles only to
learn that the art piece is allegedly not on the boat
they put it on.

Enter the person to whom it was to be delivered to,
Mr. Ellington and his two hitmen, Dick (J. Taylor) and Tom ... John doesn't say anything in his first scene, but portrays
a hitman with his snarling face and gun pointed at
Kevin's head. The story furthers, with the main characters having to owe Mr. Ellington one million dollars if he doesn't get the art piece, which is due to arrive in 5 days.

John does finally talk however, and you get a close-up
of him biting a slice of cheese pizza and even
sniffing his jacket. His scenes although short, were
very well acted, I mean the idea of "sweet & innocent"
John Nigel Taylor playing a mean hitman, if you can
believe it, is something that you have to act on, and
he did it well. My disappointment is not in his
acting but in his role. I felt that his character was
underplayed, and underwritten. Although he wasn't a
main character, I think he could have had a few more
scenes and definitely a better script. But if you are
a die-hard JT fan, then by all means get the film.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Modern Indie Masterpiece
Review: Not since Huston made the Maltese Falcon has a director so sharply captured characters truly capable of both friendship and betrayal. While other films aim to take over the film noir mantle (Shallow Grave or The Usual Suspects) Paul Rachman's debut film is the true heir to this genre. Adding to the mix - an incredible ensemble cast. One of the rare times a director's vision can overcome the weakness of an inferior script. This would be an important addition to anyone's library, and we can only expect better things down the line in Rachman's future.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Movie
Review: Picked this up in local video store. Way cool. Love it. Good independent. Sorry to miss it in theaters.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Mistitled
Review: The real title of this film should be "95 Minutes Wasting Time". First, the meat of the film--who will kill whom--hinges on an incredibly stupid sequence in which two characters temporarily abandon, in a public space, an astoundingly valuable objet d'art in their possession, only to return to it and find it gone. Now THAT'S a surprise.

If that were not enough, there's an entire sequence, later on, when the four remaining characters--one has already met his end--sit around in their respective apartments and wait, and it's really not clear what they're waiting for or why. There's shots of them ingesting drugs, fretting, making phone calls, picking up the phone, ignoring the phone, etc., etc.

Add to that a revelation, at the end, that makes no sense and you have a chaotic disaster posing as an arty, hip, suspense film.

The "four dogs" are four friends who concoct a plan, along with a fifth person, to steal a priceless Degas statue from a rich guy's mansion in Argentina, then deliver it in New York to a classy thug (Forrest Whitaker) and get paid 100 grand each. When the piece disappears, they're faced with either extinction or payment to Ellington, the thug, of a million bucks.

The plan they come up with to make good on the million dollars involves taking out backdated life insurance policies, each worth that much, and then having one of them kill another one to collect the insurance. This itself is pretty preposterous; one of the four, an attractive woman, works at an insurance company and she manages to have her boss sign the policies, EVEN THOUGH BACKDATED, thanks to her seductive charms. Like, excuse me, give me a break, OK?

There never is any poker played. Four cards are drawn to determine who will kill and who will be killed. Therein lies the substance of this ridiculous waste of time.

Don't bother.


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