㆗Speedytv㆙ Molly's Game
Duration 2H 20 minutes
genre Drama
Directors Aaron Sorkin
star Jessica Chastain, Kevin Costner
liked it 125941 votes
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Nominated for 1 Oscar. Another 7 wins & 50 nominations. See more awards » Learn more More Like This Drama | Thriller 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7. 5 / 10 X In the high-stakes world of political power-brokers, Elizabeth Sloane is the most sought after and formidable lobbyist in D. C. But when taking on the most powerful opponent of her career, she finds winning may come at too high a price. Director: John Madden Stars: Jessica Chastain, Mark Strong, Gugu Mbatha-Raw Biography Comedy Competitive ice skater Tonya Harding rises amongst the ranks at the U. S. Figure Skating Championships, but her future in the activity is thrown into doubt when her ex-husband intervenes. Craig Gillespie Margot Robbie, Sebastian Stan, Allison Janney Romance 7. 8 / 10 A seventeen-year-old aristocrat falls in love with a kind but poor artist aboard the luxurious, ill-fated R. M. Titanic. James Cameron Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zane Action Sci-Fi 7. 1 / 10 In a future where a failed climate-change experiment has killed all life except for the lucky few who boarded the Snowpiercer, a train that travels around the globe, a new class system emerges. Bong Joon Ho Chris Evans, Jamie Bell, Tilda Swinton 6. 8 / 10 A group of women take on Fox News head Roger Ailes and the toxic atmosphere he presided over at the network. Jay Roach Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman, Margot Robbie Mystery 8 / 10 Young Blade Runner K's discovery of a long-buried secret leads him to track down former Blade Runner Rick Deckard, who's been missing for thirty years. Denis Villeneuve Harrison Ford, Ryan Gosling, Ana de Armas 8. 2 / 10 A working-class Italian-American bouncer becomes the driver of an African-American classical pianist on a tour of venues through the 1960s American South. Peter Farrelly Viggo Mortensen, Mahershala Ali, Linda Cardellini Crime 7. 9 / 10 An aging hitman recalls his time with the mob and the intersecting events with his friend, Jimmy Hoffa, through the 1950-70s. Martin Scorsese Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci 8. 1 / 10 American car designer Carroll Shelby and driver Ken Miles battle corporate interference and the laws of physics to build a revolutionary race car for Ford in order to defeat Ferrari at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1966. James Mangold Matt Damon, Christian Bale, Jon Bernthal In 1980s Italy, romance blossoms between a seventeen-year-old student and the older man hired as his father's research assistant. Luca Guadagnino Armie Hammer, Timothée Chalamet, Michael Stuhlbarg Based on the true story of Jordan Belfort, from his rise to a wealthy stock-broker living the high life to his fall involving crime, corruption and the federal government. Jonah Hill, Adventure Imprisoned on the planet Sakaar, Thor must race against time to return to Asgard and stop Ragnarök, the destruction of his world, at the hands of the powerful and ruthless villain Hela. Taika Waititi Chris Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Cate Blanchett Edit Storyline Molly Bloom, a beautiful young Olympic-class skier, ran the world's most exclusive high-stakes poker game for a decade before being arrested in the middle of the night by 17 FBI agents wielding automatic weapons. Her players included Hollywood royalty, sports stars, business titans, and finally, unbeknownst to her, the Russian mob. Her only ally was her criminal defense lawyer Charlie Jaffey, who learned that there was much more to Molly than the tabloids led us to believe. Written by STX Entertainment Plot Summary Plot Synopsis Did You Know? Goofs When Molly sits with her dad after skating, she drinks from a styrofoam cup. In the next shot, she has the cup down. See more » Quotes Stella: Wait, aren't... You're Molly Bloom, right? Molly Bloom: Yeah. You don't look the same as in your photos. None of us do. See more » Soundtracks Blow Away Written by George Harrison Performed by Thenewno2 Published by Umlaut Corporation (ASCAP) c/o Penny Farthing Music By arrangement with The Bicycle Music Company See more » Frequently Asked Questions See more » Details Release Date: 5 January 2018 (USA) Also Known As: Molly's Game Box Office Budget: $30, 000, 000 (estimated) Opening Weekend USA: $2, 349, 967, 31 December 2017 Cumulative Worldwide Gross: $59, 284, 015 See more on IMDbPro » Company Credits Technical Specs See full technical specs ».
Jump to Sections of this page Accessibility Help Press alt + / to open this menu Email or Phone Password Forgot account? Sign Up Your Request Couldn't be Processed There was a problem with this request. We're working on getting it fixed as soon as we can. Return home English (US) Français (Canada) Español 中文(简体) 한국어 日本語 Português (Brasil) Deutsch Italiano العربية हिन्दी Sign Up Log In Messenger Facebook Lite Watch People Pages Page Categories Places Games Locations Marketplace Groups Portal Instagram Local Fundraisers Services About Create Ad Create Page Developers Careers Privacy Cookies Ad Choices Terms Help Settings Activity Log Facebook © 2020. Credit... STX Films Molly's Game Directed by Aaron Sorkin Biography, Crime, Drama R 2h 20m Words aren’t really exchanged in “Molly’s Game, ” Aaron Sorkin’s directorial debut; they’re smashed like racquetballs. Life comes at you fast, and so do the words that rush out of Molly Bloom (Jessica Chastain) as she relays her tale. A poker entrepreneur who ran a high-stakes game before slamming into trouble, Molly is a speed-talker and somewhat of a close one, too. She delivers stretches of her story in a voice-over that suggests that Mr. Sorkin wrote and directed his movie with a stopwatch in one hand and a DVD of Howard Hawks’s motor-mouth comedy “His Girl Friday” in the other. “His Girl Friday” (1940) has been clocked at 240 words per minute, which sounds about right for the tempo Mr. Sorkin has embraced in “Molly’s Game. ” Its titular poker princess is based on the real Molly Bloom, who had a moment a while back when she was busted for running a high-stakes game, her world imploding when the F. B. I. came knocking. She wrote a book, naming players in games she helped run and others she ran — Leonardo DiCaprio, Ben Affleck and Tobey Maguire — which earned her acreage in Vanity Fair magazine. Her book’s full title is: “Molly’s Game: From Hollywood’s Elite to Wall Street’s Billionaire Boys Club, My High-Stakes Adventure in the World of Underground Poker. ” The movie more or less follows the trajectory laid out by that mouthful of a title, though Mr. Sorkin modestly amends it for dramatic purposes. It begins with an early devastating, life-altering ski-crash that occurs when Molly is an Olympic hopeful. Her slope dreams having come to an end, she postpones law school and moves to Los Angeles. (“I wanted to be young for a while in warm weather. ”) There, she flops in a friend’s apartment and ends up working at a club, hustling overpriced vodka to guys who think they’re players. She catches the eye of one, Dean (Jeremy Strong), who hires her to help run a high-end poker game where the first buy-in is $10, 000. The movie takes off once the cards start shuffling. Molly watches and learns, absorbing the game’s rituals and language while charming the all-male players. She’s a quick study and a committed Googler, looking up poker terminology and music for gambling away money (Kenny Rogers). With his editors, Mr. Sorkin gives Molly’s poker education snap, cutting from shot to shot — from a drink being poured to a slammed-down stack of chips — and turning images into near-hieroglyphics. One of the editors, Alan Baumgarten, worked on David O. Russell’s “ American Hustle, ” a movie that, like “Molly’s Game, ” owes a large debt to Martin Scorsese’s native-son crime stories, including “Casino. ” The stakes are rather less vital in “Molly’s Game, ” which mostly tracks how a shrewd young woman threw fancy gambling parties for very important and self-important men with exceedingly deep pockets. Once Molly has stopped Googling, her entrepreneurial juices start flowing and she realizes that she could be running her own lucrative game. She does, setting one up at a fancy hotel and trading her nice-girl blah for showier makeup, designer threads and deeper décolletage. The players follow her, including a major star known only as Player X, who Michael Cera — in a wonderful, insinuatingly creepy performance — turns into a portrait of Hollywood entitlement and moral rot. Image Credit... Michael Gibson/STX Films It’s too bad there isn’t more of him in “Molly’s Game, ” because, despite Ms. Chastain’s charisma and gift for delivering Mr. Sorkin’s fast talk, Molly isn’t interesting. Things happen to her, but most of the action and fun is at the table. Mr. Sorkin has written some sharp characters and cast them accordingly, tapping actors like Mr. Strong, Chris O’Dowd and a terrific Bill Camp, the protagonist in an affecting mini-tragedy in three acts (stoicism, disintegration and heartbreak). All the while, Molly smiles on the side, suffers a setback, moves to New York and racks up big money from card games that, at their best, turn into condensed pocket-size dramas, by turns triumphant and catastrophic. Sorkin tries to deepen Molly’s story and the stakes in several ways, partly through her legal troubles. Soon after the movie opens, the F. busts her, which leads her to Charlie Jaffey (Idris Elba), an expensive lawyer who becomes her passionate champion. This gives Mr. Sorkin a second line of action (and an office for discussions), allowing him to switch between Molly’s high-flying past (shuffle, deal, play) and her present-day troubles. As the story unfolds, the past catches up to the present and Mr. Sorkin keeps trying to invest Molly’s story with meaning, mostly through a little family psychodrama and some deeply unpersuasive feminism, including by casting her as a victim of men. It’s hard not to guffaw when, after Molly loses one game, she speaks of her “powerlessness over the unfair whims of men. ” But while it’s silly it’s also patronizing, because by attempting to portray Molly as any kind of female victim — and by glossing over her culpability — Mr. Sorkin only ends up denying this character her agency. Just as dubiously, when Molly is at her most vulnerable, he trots out a series of male authority figures, including her estranged father (Kevin Costner), who speak at and for her, who excuse her past, vouch for her character and enthuse about her future. They replace all the slick bros at the poker table and, taken together, make quite a paternal choir. It’s a striking progression for a movie that tries, altogether too feebly, to put a feminist spin on a woman who made bank through an illegal gambling ring. Empowerment is one way to look at this story, though only if you sentimentalize its main character. It is hard not to wonder how this movie might have turned out if Mr. Sorkin had decided his protagonist was as much a weasel as the one he wrote for “ The Social Network, ” another story of an American striver. It’s hard not to wonder, too, how this story might play if its protagonist wasn’t a woman who, as this movie sees it, needed so much male defending.
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