Gambling House Near Me

Gambling House
Directed byTed Tetzlaff
Produced byWarren B. Duff
Screenplay byMarvin Borowsky
Allen Rivkin
Story byErwin S. Gelsey
(as Ervin Gelsey)
StarringVictor Mature
Terry Moore
William Bendix
Music byRoy Webb
CinematographyHarry J. Wild
Edited byRoland Gross
Production
company
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
Running time
80 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Gambling House is a 1951 American film noircrime film directed by Ted Tetzlaff and starring Victor Mature, Terry Moore and William Bendix.[2]

Plot[edit]

Title: Sketches in a Chinese Gambling House, Near Hong Kong. ' Gamblers hurrying to catch the boat for Hong Kong'. ( More research, shows that it is kowloon. ) Although public gambling is forbidden by law in china, gambling houses flourish in every city, and are thronged by wooers of fortune of all classes.

A gangster, Joe Farrow, kills a man after a game of craps. He then offers gambler, Marc Fury, a payment of $50,000 if he will take the rap and stand trial. Farrow tries to renege on the money, so Fury steals a ledger with information that could put Farrow behind bars.

Near
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  • The website is operated and managed by EveryMatrix Ltd., a company bearing registration number C44411, and having its registered address at Level 5, Suite 1A, Portomaso Business Gambling House Near Me Tower, Vjal Portomaso, St. Julians, STJ 4012, Malta and by EveryMatrix N.V., a limited liability company incorporated under the laws of.

Fury manages to be acquitted in court, but immigration officers arrest him and take to Ellis Island and threaten to deport him, proving that neither he nor his parents never become naturalized citizens. Fury slips the ledger into the possession of an immigration social worker, Lynn Warren, then later tracks her down, retrieves the book and tries to begin a romance.

Farrow's gunman comes looking for Fury, but ultimately double-crosses his boss. Lynn still isn't sure how she feels about him, but when Fury offers the $50,000 to a family that needs it to remain in America, she finally admires and trusts him.

Cast[edit]

  • Victor Mature as Marc Fury
  • Terry Moore as Lynn Warren
  • William Bendix as Joe Farrow
  • Zachary Charles as Willie (as Zachary A. Charles)
  • Basil Ruysdael as Judge Ravinek
  • Donald Randolph as Lloyd Crane
  • Damian O'Flynn as Ralph Douglas
  • Cleo Moore as Sally
  • Ann Doran as Della
  • Eleanor Audley as Mrs. Livingston
  • Gloria Winters as B.J. Warren
  • Don Haggerty as Sharky

Production[edit]

The story was originally called Mr Whiskas. It was purchased by RKO in 1947 and scheduled in 1948 as a vehicle for Victor Mature, who had a contract with RKO to make one film a year. However the project was postponed to enable Mature to make Easy Living. In July 1949 it was announced he would make Mr Whiskas next. Warren Duff was to write and produce.[3]

In late 1949 the project was renamed Alias Mike Fury.[4] Mature refused to make the movie and was put on suspension by Fox.[5] The script was rewritten and Mature ended up making the film, which was retitled Gambling House.[6] Filming started February 1950.[7]

Reception[edit]

When first released, critic Bosley Crowther panned the film. He wrote, 'Don't look for very rich pickings in R. K. O.'s Gambling House, a run-of-the-mill melodrama that came to the Mayfair on Saturday. Your chances for solid satisfaction from this tale of a crook who goes straight after meeting a decent young lady are about as good as they would be from a fixed wheel ... Put it down as claptrap and the performance of Mr. Mature as another demonstration of an actor doing the best he can with a bad role. Miss Moore is entirely incidental and William Bendix is mulishly mean as the tough and deceitful rascal who crosses up Mr. Mature. To say any more about it might tend to incriminate somebody.'[8]

References[edit]

Near
  1. ^'Gambling House: Detail View'. American Film Institute. Retrieved May 19, 2014.
  2. ^Gambling House at the TCM Movie Database.
  3. ^THOMAS F. BRADY (July 19, 1949). 'MATURE GETS LEAD IN 'MR. WHISKERS': RKO Names Actor to Gangster Role in Film Based on Gelsey Story -- Duff Is Producer'. New York Times. p. 21.
  4. ^Schallert, Edwin (Nov 30, 1949). 'Tetzlaff Will Direct Mature in 'Alias Fury;' Musicals Wynn's Fate'. Los Angeles Times. p. A7.
  5. ^'Thomas Pryor, 'STUDIO SUSPENSION FOR VICTOR MATURE: FOX STAR REFUSES TO PLAY ROLE IN RKO FILM, 'MIKE FURY,' ON LOAN-OUT COMMITMENT''. New York Times. Dec 14, 1949. p. 44.
  6. ^THOMAS F. BRADY (Jan 4, 1950). 'MATURE RETURNED TO PAYROLL AT FOX: Actor Had Been Suspended for Refusing Role in RKO Deal --Now Agrees to Part Of Local Origin'. New York Times. p. 31.
  7. ^THOMAS F. BRADY Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES.. (Feb 2, 1950). '2 NEW COMERS GET METRO FILM LEADS: Schary Names Nancy Davis, James Whitmore to Co-Star in 'Next Voice You Hear''. New York Times. p. 31.
  8. ^Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times, film review, March 19, 1951. Accessed: July 27, 2013.

External links[edit]

  • Gambling House at the American Film Institute Catalog
  • Gambling House on IMDb
  • Gambling House at AllMovie
  • Gambling House at the TCM Movie Database
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Gambling_House_(film)&oldid=990400540'
These are the relevant references from the Books where a Gambling House or House of Chance is mentioned.
It is not meant to be anything other than the facts of the matter.
Arrive at your own conclusions.
I wish you well,
Fogaban

Supporting References

'What is wrong, Mistress?' asked Midice.

'The guests have fled,' she said.

I did not understand this, for the tables, the games, did not close until the early morning.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 57

Did we not invite in the patrons, at the door, with our smiles, the glances over our shoulders, our fingers lightly touching our brands beneath the cloth, not silk, but rep cloth, for ours was a shabby den for its purposes. We served as the slaves we were in the wide low-ceilinged, ill-lit interior of the outer room. We would bring the gamesters Paga and ka-la-na, and platters of meat and bread, and cakes and sweets, to keep them at the tables. We pretended zestful enthusiasm for their playing, as if it might be our own. How we rubbed against them, so inadvertently, laughed, joked, touched their arms, and hands, applauded their boldness, pretended dismay at a loss, pretended chagrin and sorrow when they made to leave the tables. Rather they should choose and again match ostraka, hazard another turn of the wheel, another placement of the stones, another roll of the dice! We must serve our paga and ka-la-na modestly, of course, for the men must be kept at the games.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 61

'Astrinax,' said Menon, 'is seeking slaves for a gambling house. It is one of several on the Street of Chance. In such a house, there are commonly slaves, beautiful slaves, to wait upon the men, to serve drinks and food, to contribute to the décor and pleasantness of the setting, to mingle with the patrons, to encourage betting, even to the point of recklessness.'

'I see,' I said.

'In the beginning,' he said, 'you would be a lesser slave, though not hard to look upon, and might assist the other girls.'

'Yes, Master,' I said. I was pleased, at least, to learn that I was not hard to look upon. Perhaps in such a place I might attract a man and win for myself a private master. I could make my choice judiciously, finding a fellow both handsome and strong, and, in such a place, quite possibly one of wealth. A girl has ways of course, of influencing a fellow to think of buying her.

It was lonely in my chains, at night. Sometime I clutched them, hurting my hands, in frustration, those metal fastenings on me so fixedly, and thrashed on my mat.

'I think I know the house,' said Menon to Astrinax. 'If it is the one I think it is, it is rumored to be dishonest.'

'If so,' smiled Astrinax, 'I think our little Allison might fit in quite nicely.'

I remembered my response to the question about the candy.

'Doubtless,' said Menon.

I feared I had disappointed my master.

'You understand the sort of thing we have in mind, do you not, Allison?' asked Astrinax.

'Yes, Master,' I said.

'Do you think you could well fulfill your duties in such a place?'

'Yes, Master,' I said.

'I thought so,' he said.

'Slaves, there,' said Menon, 'exist to loosen the strings on pouches, urge fellows to shower gold on the tables, to risk much, beyond reason, to pout and look away if there is evidence of hesitation or circumspection, to cry out in pleasure if an extra tarn disk is put in the plate, another card drawn, another flash of dice cast.'

'Yes, Master,' I said.

I did not see that that was my concern.

'Some will ply them with drink ' he said, 'and bring them food, to keep them at the tables.'

'I understand,' I said.

'You may be expected to do such things,' he said.

'Yes, Master,' I said.

'And,' said Astrinax, 'you would be expected to do such things well, with an appearance of delight and enthusiasm. Do you think you could manage that?'

'Yes, Master,' I said.

In such a place might one not secure a suitable master, perhaps even one rich, though, to be sure, I would hope to be his only slave.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Pages 175 - 176

'What was she?' asked the woman.

'A gambling-house girl,' said the man.

Fish tables gambling near me

'What is that?' asked the woman.

'A serving slave, a display slave, a lure slave, such things,' he said. 'They encourage men to drink, to eat, to spend, to wager, to linger at the tables, to draw further cards, to cast the dice just one last time, and such.'

'The gambling,' she said, 'is not then done with lives, those of men and animals.'

'Not in any obvious sense,' said the man.

'I see,' she said. And it sounded as though she dismissed the bouts of the spinning wheel, the shaken box, the buying of chances, the drawing of cards. The blood shed in such games is largely unseen, doubtless, but, I fear, it is there.

I did know that men bet on tarn races, which could be dangerous at the rings, sometimes a body broken, a limb lost, a wing torn away, and that some cared for arena sports, sword games. Tharlarion races were regularly held at Venna, and other towns. Sometimes, interestingly, fortunes were wagered on kaissa matches.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Pages 180 - 181
I had, some days ago when out of the gambling house on an errand, barefoot, in my short, purple tunic, with its lettering on the back, seen a seemingly free woman, in lovely robes and veils, seized and stripped by guardsmen. Normally, when there is doubt as to the status or condition of a woman she is given to free women, who may then, with respect to her modesty should she be free, examine her body, for a possible collar, or brand. This one, however, was simply disrobed, bound hand and foot, and put in a wagon, for delivery to a market praetor, who would see to her return to her master, or, that failing, to her lashing, fugitive branding, and resale. I would not dare to speak to a free person, but I hurried to a tower slave in the crowd, trying to learn what had happened. The tower slave, however, would not demean herself by responding to the inquiry of a 'half-naked, gambling-house girl.'
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 183
'You should have seen her,' he said, 'in the tunic of the gambling house.'
'I am sure she was attractive,' said the woman.
'She was almost nude,' he said.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 185

My hopes of acquiring a suitable master had been muchly dashed after the burning of the gambling house, and my translation, with that of my chain sisters, to the Tarsk Market. What suitable master would have recourse to such a market for a slave? One would hope to find then, if slaves at all, only pot girls, kettle-and-mat girls, she-tarsks, so to speak. I certainly did not consider myself a she-tarsk. I had been popular enough, and as a slave, in the gambling house. Its patrons had not found the former Allison Ashton-Baker, barefoot, collared, briefly and seductively tunicked, remiss as, or displeasing as, a slave. And how she had enjoyed the eyes of the men upon her, well understanding such appraisals as evidence of her value! The free woman is doubtless priceless, but the slave has an actual value, what men are willing to pay for her. My thoughts of a master had varied from time to time. Sometimes it seemed to me that I would like a weak master whom I might control, manage, and manipulate, rather as a typical female companion on my native world was accustomed, given the culture in question, to control, manage, and manipulate their male companions, rather to the unhappiness, distress, and frustration of both. Would it not be pleasant to be owned by a weak man, with whom one would be sure of having one's own way? To be sure, one must be careful. I would be in his collar, and there would be a whip on its peg. But I though, rather, I must be a true slave, as I wanted a true man, one who would lust after me with power, who would be satisfied with nothing less than owning me, wholly, one who would be to my slave a master, one who would have me kneel before him, naked and collared, perhaps chained, my head to his feet, one who would own me, unequivocally. I wanted to be his, his property, a helpless object, goods, possessed by him, in all the fullness of law, in all the fullness of culture, in all the fullness of nature. I supposed then that I must be in my heart a slave, one radically female, and needful. To such a man I would have no choice but to submit, and wholly, and to such a man I longed to submit, and wholly. It was in the collar of such a man I wanted to be; it was the collar of such a man I longed to wear. It was the touch of such a man which would make me weak and helpless, a yielding, submitted slave. It was the touch of such a man which would set me afire. It was the touch of such a man for which I would beg. But, alas, how can one's slave be satisfied, as in the lament of so many women of my world, where one has no master?
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Pages 200 - 201

I remembered the kitchen of the eating house. There at least, from time to time, men would put me in their hands, and do astonishing things to me, which left me in no doubt as to my bondage. Too, in the gambling house, though seldom, for we were not to distract the men from the tables, I was put to a customer's pleasure, usually when it was feared he might be on the point of leaving. At such times a copper tarsk was often put in my mouth, to be retrieved by the customer when done with me, a tarsk which might be redeemed for tarsk-bits, to be spent on the tables, tarsk-bits which might, soon, result in the loss of tarsks, even of silver.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Pages 251 - 252

Then I recalled that Astrinax, now with the caravan, long ago, had arranged my purchase from Menon, on behalf of the gambling house. I recalled both Astrinax and Menon had thought I would be a good buy for such a place, a girl willing to wheedle and smile, to pretend to emotions of excitement and enthusiasm, one who could adroitly feign dismay and sympathy, one who would ply customers with drink, urge them to remain at the tables, encourage them to recklessness in wagering, though it might lead to the loss of estates and honor, to shame, vagrancy, and destitution.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 372
'You once served in a gambling house, did you no?' he said.
'Yes,' I said, 'on the Street of Chance, in Ar.'
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 376

'You are familiar with card-sport from the gambling house, are you not,' he asked.

'No,' I said. 'I did not know those games. Some were played at tables in the back.'

There are different decks of cards, containing different numbers of cards, with different markings, and such. The most common deck of cards is thick, and contains a hundred cards. For the most part there is little standardization on Gor, and many things differ from city to city. One game does tend to be standardized, or relatively standardized, however, and that is kaissa. The kaissa of Turia is apparently identical with that of Ar, and that with that of Port Kar, Ko-ro-ba, Anango, Tabor, the island ubarates, and so on. This probably has to do with the Sardar Fairs. As you know there is literally a caste of Players, generally itinerant, which makes its living by 'the Game.' The charge for a game can range from a tarsk-bit, which is common, to a golden tarn disk, of double weight. Important kaissa players are celebrities, welcomed in a hundred cities, and entertained at the courts of Ubars. They have a status comparable to that of conquerors and poets.

'Was the card-sport honest in the gambling house?' asked he in whose care I was.

'I do not think so,' I said.

'No more than other games?'

'One guesses not,' I said.

'You seem to know little of it,' he said.

'I am a slave,' I said.

Such things were managed by the masters. They were seldom made clear to slaves. Our concern was to keep men at the tables.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 380

'Perhaps you are curious as to why you have been ordered to report here,' he said.

'Yes, Master,' I said.

'It has to do with your experience in the house of chance, in Ar,' he said.

'I was only a serving slave, an entertainment slave,' I said. 'My role, and that of the others, was primarily to keep men at the games.'

'While your masters ruined them,' he said.

'They were free to leave whenever they wished,' I said.

'But perhaps their luck would change,' he said. 'And how, if they left now, could they recoup their losses? And might their departure not dismay the pretty kajira who has been so delightedly and enthusiastically at their side encouraging them to spin or choose once again, and then again, one sharing so sympathetically in their fortunes? Could they, if they were to leave, brave that tiny exclamation of disappointment, a pout from such pretty lips, a turning aside to another fellow, one of greater interest?'

'Master has been in such a house,' I said.

'Perhaps,' he said.
'Your pretty body,' he said, 'should be lashed, and lashed.'
'I am no longer in such a house,' I said. 'A kajira must do as she is told!'
'Yes,' he said, 'but I suspect some are better at doing what they are told than others.'
I was silent.
'I learned from Astrinax,' he said, 'from your test in the office of Menon, which you passed easily, that you, a nasty, deceitful little kajira were an excellent choice for such a slave.'
'Master!' I protested.
'Ah, yes,' he said, 'you, with your smiles, your expressions, your laughter, your body movements, your inadvertent touchings, your little cries of pleasure and disappointment would do very well at keeping a fellow at the tables, in prompting him to continue, even be it into penury or destitution.'
. . .

I looked up him. I felt myself his slave. I wanted to be his slave. Then I put my head down. 'Master has suggested that my presence here has to do with my having served in the house of chance, in Ar,' I said.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Pages 515 - 516

Gambling House Near Me Yellow Pages

'Do you remember my concern with cards?' he asked.

'Yes,' I said.

Gambling House Near Me Restaurants

'You served in a house of chance,' he said.

'Until it was burned, and I, and others, were sold in the Tarsk Market.'

'That seems a suitable place to sell one such as you,' he said.

'Doubtless,' I said.

'In the house of chance,' he said, 'there were games involving cards, were there not?'

'In the back of the large room, at the far tables,' I said, 'but I did not attend on those tables. Most of us attended on the gaming tables, with the wheels, and the dice where most of the men were.'

'But you must have heard things,' he said.

'One always hears things,' I said, warily.

'I am not an investigating magistrate,' he said, 'with a rack in the next room.'

'I understand,' I said.

'Presumably,' he said, 'those gambling on behalf of the house would wish to have some advantage in the matter.'

'Otherwise,' I said, 'they might lose money, unintentionally.'

'Unintentionally? ' he smiled.

'It is important,' I said, 'for the patron to win occasionally, else he might abandon the game, or grow suspicious.'

'And how,' he asked, 'does the house obtain its advantage? Are there apertures in the ceiling through which an accomplice, perhaps with a glass, might somehow signal the house's player, are there loitering observers nearby, in a position to read cards, and convey signals?'

'I do not think so,' I said.

'The advantage then,' he said, 'lies in the cards themselves.'

'That is my understanding,' I said. 'But I did not personally, attend on the far tables.'

'There would be calls for new decks, sealed decks,' he said.

'I think that decks were prepared, and then sealed,' I said.

'The house's player could recognize the nature and value of an opponent's card from the back ' he said.

'There were intricate designs on the back of the cards,' I said, 'apparently identical on each card.'

'But not identical,' he said, 'for those who knew what to look for.'

'I think the differences were subtle,' I said, 'very subtle.'
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Pages 520 - 521
'Why am I here?' I asked.
'You served in a house of chance,' he said. 'I thought you might be helpful.'
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 525

'May I see it?' I asked.

I took the deck of cards in my hand, and moved the cards about a little. I detected no slips of paper hidden amongst the cards, nor anything on the cards that was foreign to the expected designs and markings. As far as I could tell, it was a normal deck of cards. Perhaps, I thought, there is nothing more here than what appears to be here. Might this not be innocent? Perhaps Kleomenes had expressed an interest in play, which interest had come to the attention of Desmond of Harfax, who had somehow located and supplied a suitable means for exploring this interest? Certainly they knew one another from the time of the caravan. Kleomenes had been twice at a camp of ours, when we first met him and his hunters, and, second, when he had visited us after his hunt, the night the tharlarion had been driven away. The one difference in this deck of cards from the deck which I had earlier seen in the keeping of Desmond of Harfax was the attractive speckling on the edges of the deck, a sort of design with which I was familiar from the house of chance.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 529

I did know that messages were somehow conveyed in some decks of cards, but, as far as I could tell, this was an ordinary deck. It did have the speckling about the edges of the deck, which I had seen in the Cave, but I had seen such cards, as well, in the house of chance. Indeed, many decks came decorated, in one fashion or another.
Conspirators of Gor Book 31 Page 551

'You have had too much to drink ' he said.

'You followed me from the gambling house,' I said.

'You lost heavily,' he said. 'Perhaps tonight you will feed from the garbage troughs.'

'Perhaps,' I said. 'Who are you?'
Smugglers of Gor Book 32 Page 44