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California Split

1974

Comedy / Drama

2
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh86%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright83%
IMDb Rating7.1107192

friendshipfightgamblingcasinostripper

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Jeff Goldblum Photo
Jeff Goldblum as Lloyd Harris
Elliott Gould Photo
Elliott Gould as Charlie Waters
George Segal Photo
George Segal as Bill Denny
Kane Hodder Photo
Kane Hodder as Reno Poker Player
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
997.09 MB
1280*542
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S 3 / 6
1.81 GB
1920*814
English 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 48 min
P/S 1 / 8

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by shepardjessica-18 / 10

Sly under-rated early Altman!

I worked on the set of this one and it was a wonderful experience. This gambling tale is light and sad with ensemble acting all around. George Segal (always good) and Elliott Gould (sometimes good) make a great team of "losers" who just can't resist their addiction. Bert Remsen has a great supporting role, along with Ann Prentiss and Gwen Welles - ditzy hookers.

An 8 out of 10. Best performance = Mr. Segal. I don't think this made a dime unfortunately. A must for all Robert Altman fans. I'm sure this is available now on DVD, so seek it out for an American tale that never quite spins out of control. You won't regret it.

Reviewed by Iwould8 / 10

some true things about gambling

Now I really thinks that this is an amazing good movie. Amazing both for the story and for the actors: they produce a common effort in saying some real true things about gambling. Great directing, too, and great places to shoot the story (how clever to choose the depressing Reno instead of Las Vegas! Atlantic City would have been a good choice, too). Gambling is what people do when they have anything else left to do. Gambling is all about losing, feeling sad, and loneliness. And it's the same if you win or if you lose, no difference. Other films usually show winners, when they solves their common life problems through gambling, or losers, when they ruin their own common life trough gambling. What is shown by California Split is that, if you are a gambler, then there's no space for anything else, say life, love, or hope. And that's both for winners and for losers.

Reviewed by bmacv8 / 10

The compulsive gambler seen through Altman's dark glass

Why California Split remains among the most obscure of Robert Altman's extraordinary 1970s oeuvre is a mystery. Its stars -- Elliot Gould and George Segal -- were at the top of their form, free and comfortable working in Altman's off-the-cuff, low-key style. Its supporting cast -- Ann Prentiss, Gwen Welles and especially Bert Remsen, as the cross-dressing old jane "Helen Brown," -- is memorable. And its full gallery of extras (many drawn from the therapeutic community Synanon) populate a surreal gambling netherworld in California and Nevada. Altman is working in highest gear with the layered, semi-improvised and alluringly murky style he pioneered. As in Altman's best work, the story just sort of happens, without much distinction between foreground and backdrop, principal characters and walk-ons. Lacking the rigid and didactic "dramaturgy" of its competitors, California Split endures as one of the most probing examinations of the soul and psyche of the abnormal gambler ever filmed.

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