Casino - 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital [4K UHD]
D**A
Fantastic
It was so good. I love mobster movie. Robert De Niro did a fantastic job. Joe Pesci was so funny. Sharon Stone played her part to the tee. The DVD played so nice and clear.
T**E
Clear picture.
I haven't seen the whole movie yet.
D**E
TOUGH GUYS HUH YOU AND YOUR BROTHA-Philly Leotardo
this is a fantastic mafia movie I watched this movie three times within a week I would say it's better than Goodfellas
C**E
Nonstop, entertainment
Best mafia movie ever. And as they say a cast of thousands.
R**.
Casino
Good movie
S**E
Love the movie
Perfect blue ray
M**N
One of the Best UHD 4K Discs
If you own a UHD 4K player, and of course a television capable of HDR display, this disc is a wonder to behold. A reference quality transfer that looks and sounds absolutely amazing.Highly recommended.PS. Make sure to invest in high quality certified high speed HDMI cables. They make a huge difference in picture quality and audio performance. If your cables are older than three or more years, odds are you need to upgrade.
C**K
Right Back Where He Started
In our generation nobody can touch Scorsese when it comes to gangster films. "Casino" is one of his finest. When released it was criticized as a retread of "GoodFellows," but that's unfair. While there are similarities, the latter is more a character study, while "Casino" has an epic quality: the encapsulation of an era in Las Vegas's tawdry history that has come and gone. All of the lead actors—De Niro, Stone, and Pesci—generate believable, powerful, and unenviable characters that are right on the money. It's their intricate interplay that makes this movie hum. The supporting cast, which includes Don Rickles and Dick Smothers in dramatic parts, have little to do but do well what's given them. The music is a hodgepodge of everything from Bach to Mick Jagger and Hoagy Carmichael. The production values and cinematography match the subject's glitz. Scorsese's direction and Thelma Schoonmaker's editing are practically faultless. It's always a pleasure to be introduced to a movie with credits by Saul and Elaine Bass, who nail the tenor from the get-go. Two warnings: Even by Scorsese's standards, this is a very violent film. It was originally given the kiss-of-death NC-17 rating; the director reined himself in to slide it to an R. One can only wonder, with revulsion, what was left on the cutting-room floor. Finally, as befits an epic, this is a long movie. Be prepared for a long slide into hell with its protagonists.
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