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"21 The Movie"
"21 Trailer" - First Look
"21 The Movie" - In Theaters March 28, 2008

21-Poster

"21 The Movie" - "21 The Movie"
based on Ben Mezrich's best-selling nonfiction book "Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions," revolves around a group of young men who become experts in the art of card counting - and collecting millions of dollars from casinos around the world - until they are stopped. "21 The Movie" is also known as "Bringing Down The House The Movie."

STARRING: Kevin Spacey, Jim Sturgess, Kate Bosworth, Laurence Fishburne, Liza LaPira
DIRECTOR: Robert Luketic
STUDIO: Sony Pictures
RATING: PG-13 (For language, violence)
THEATER COUNT (Opening Weekend): TBD
RUNNING TIME: TBD
TOTAL DOMESTIC BOX OFFICE: TBD
U.S. DVD RELEASE DATE: TBD






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"21"
Behind The Scenes

Two weeks prior to filming, the five actors who play the M.I.T. team of card counters spent time with card consultant Kyle Morris to learn how to play the game. Morris, who lives in Las Vegas and consults for films, worked closely with the cast during filming and appears as a blackjack dealer in one scene.

Regarding learning the game, he offers, "The cast really surprised me. A lot of them knew absolutely nothing about blackjack but they knew quite a bit about acting. It was more important to teach them how to look and act like a blackjack player."

Jim Sturgess admits, "I had never played blackjack before in my life. Kyle taught us basic strategies-how to hold yourself at a table, how to do the signals-just to make us looked relaxed at a blackjack table."

Jacob Pitts explains, "Last time I played blackjack I was twelve years old. Kyle taught us basic strategies and all the signals, but he also showed us techniques for moving chips and manipulating them - the kind of moves that you pick up when you spend a lot of time in casinos."

The one person who didn't pick up the chip tricks is Jim Sturgess. "I asked Jeff Ma about it and he said, 'No, I never did those kinds of tricks. I was the big player - if I was doing chip tricks, they would have sniffed me out,'" he remembers.

Liza Lapira says, "Before being in this movie, I never thought playing blackjack was fun. But thanks to 'research,' we got to go to a lot of cool places. It didn't feel like we were working!"

Kate Bosworth laughs, "The research we had to do on this film was to learn how to play blackjack with real blackjack players in Vegas. How tough is that? I've been to Vegas and have gambled a bit, but now I feel like I somewhat know what I'm doing."

Morris reveals, "A couple of the cast took it even further. Aaron and Liza practiced their card counting. A couple of times I'd spread the cards out and Liza would tell me what the count was and she would be right!"

Lapira isn't so sure in her skills. "I got Beat the Dealer, the famous book by Edward O. Thorp, and tried to count cards. I'm sure I looked like a big freak in the Santa Monica Coffee Bean, counting to myself."

Morris says that the cast did have some success at the tables. "I know some of the people in the cast had some big wins while we were in Vegas and chalked it all up to research," he says. "Hopefully, later on, they won't blame their losses on me."

Once filming got underway, it was important to the filmmakers to shoot in real casinos whenever possible. Initially, the filmmakers were concerned that Vegas honchos would not want to cooperate in the filming of a story that shows them being taken by card-counters. "What we soon found out is that the casinos actually liked the story, because it makes people think they can beat the system, and do it easily. That helps bring the people into the casinos," says Brunetti.

When filming began in Las Vegas, one of Luketic's challenges was to capture the chaos of Sin City. "You can never completely shut down a casino," says Luketic, "but we were able to get a table or two or a small section. We'd be filming at one table, orchestrating a complicated camera move, and at the next would be a bunch of frat boys having a great time. The casinos were great partners and helped us tremendously - I'm very proud of what came out of our two weeks in Vegas."

Capturing the complicated tracking shots between tables and doing it in a highly stylish, sophisticated, brightly colored way was Academy Award®-winning cinematographer Russell Carpenter, ASC. "Vegas never closes - the casinos have business 24/7. The key challenge was to shoot our scenes without interrupting the business going on around us. It was exciting."

Carpenter adds that they were able to find creative and unique ways to achieve the look that Luketic wanted through very unusual means. "We found that we could add a lot of sizzle to our scenes by shooting a long lens through a 35-cent light-up Twizzler that we bought in a hotel gift shop," he says. "It looks great, like you're shooting through miles of neon."

"Robert's directing style on set in Vegas was very relaxed," notes producer Dana Brunetti. "He'd arrive completely organized and knowing what he wanted to get, but at the same time, he would be open to new ideas and see where a performance would go. He created an atmosphere that was both loose-and-lively and methodical, and that kept things moving stress-free amid the pandemonium of Vegas."

Luketic says the best-selling book had all the dramatic moments and tension the film needed, but to translate the story to film required him to make creative decisions on how to bring the internal world of card counting to the screen. "Blackjack really isn't a spectator sport, but we had to make it into an arena game," he says. "We asked ourselves, 'How do we visualize genius? How do we get inside our lead character's mind?' Using specialized lenses and cameras and CGI, we were able to get right onto the surface of the cards and into the characters' eyes. As a filmmaker, 21 challenged and pushed me."

Production Designer Missy Stewart, who previously collaborated with Luketic on Legally Blonde, Win a Date With Tad Hamilton, and Monster-In-Law, was responsible for presenting Vegas's glitz on the screen. "We talked about how in Las Vegas there would be a lot of camera movement, the kids would be on the go, in a very animated, almost psychedelic environment.

"What you'll see is what I consider the 'new Las Vegas,' which is the Las Vegas that the younger people go to for a weekend. It's very different than the old casinos," Stewart continues. "The Red Rock Resort & Casino, the new Planet Hollywood, the Hard Rock-all hip, fun places to go to and to be seen in."

Contrasting with the hyper-realized Vegas is a very controlled, quiet look for the Boston sequences. "Boston has the traditional look of a 19th Century city," she says. "We embraced the idea that most of our Boston work would be in older buildings, like Doyle's Tavern, that has been around since the 1800s."

Carpenter concurs, "My favorite part of this movie has been establishing a different look for what we shot in Vegas and what we shot in Boston. We use a different color palette and a different way of shooting for the energy of Vegas versus the sense of enclosure that our character, Ben, feels in Boston."

Luketic adds, "Working in two distinctly different locations was a challenge. But ultimately, with this highly talented group of filmmakers and cast behind me as well as the cooperation of the casinos and the cities of Boston and Cambridge, I think we have a great looking and exciting movie."

Differentiating styles was equally important for Costume Designer Luca Mosca. After all, he was responsible for helping the actors transform from M.I.T. students into Vegas's highest rollers. "It was great fun to create the chameleon quality of these kids from one environment into the next," he says.

But changing the students into the coolest kids on the block is just one transformation. In fact, even as a student, Ben changes over the course of the film as he becomes more self-assured. "It was especially challenging to gradually build Ben, our lead, from a plain student in a maroon M.I.T. sweatshirt into a student with a new degree of confidence without revealing too much," Mosca notes.

For the actors, donning their Vegas identities was part of the fun. Kate Bosworth says, "One of my favorite things about the project was the fact that the students disguised themselves so that they wouldn't be recognized by the casinos. I had my 'Southern Belle' look, my 'Soprano-Jersey Girl' look, and my 'Louise Brooks' look. It was fun!"


How Card Counting Works

In "21," the spotters play low-wager bets, counting the cards and waiting for the deck to become hot - the more face cards left in the deck, the hotter the deck is. Once a face card is played, the spotters score it -1. Cards 2 through 6 are +1. 7, 8, and 9 are neutral and have no value.

Once the deck is hot, the spotters cross their arms to signal the big player. He comes in, flashes his cash, and makes high-wager bets on the hot deck, leaving and bouncing to another table when the cards are shuffled. The spotters signal the big player by speaking in code to let him know what the count is:

+1 = Tree +10 = Bowling
+2 = Switch +11 = Football
+3 = Stool +12 = Eggs
+4 = Car + 13 = Witch
+5 = Glove +14 = Ring
+6 = Gun +15 = Paycheck
+7 = Craps +16 = Sweet
+8 = Pool +17 = Magazine
+9 = Cat +18 = Voting Booth

For example, if the count is +15, a spotter might give the big player a clue by pretending that he has lost money at the table, saying, "I've blown my whole paycheck. My girlfriend is going to kill me."

If a spotter needs to talk to another team member, the signal is to touch the eye. If the spotter sees that the big player has lost the count, the spotter can signal that the deck is cooling with a hand to the forehead. And if a team member sees that the dealer, or the pit boss, or security has figured out what's going on, the signal is fingers through the hair: Get. Out. Now.

 

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In The Spotlight!

"2008 Movies" & "2009 Movies" & "2010 Movies"
And Today:
A Single Man
By Tim Nasson
Publisher, Wild About Movies

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Wild About Movies provides you with the most comprehensive movie posters, movie trailers, movie synopses, Behind The Scenes of movies, and celebrity interviews, and current, updated movie release date information - than any other movie website. At WAM you are able to peruse the movie trailers, movie posters and movie synopses of more than 500 movies not yet in theaters (and thousands of movies formerly in movie theaters and currently on DVD, including all "2009 DVDS" and "2009 BluRays"). The latest additions to the Wild About Movies database: The (delayed) Rob Marshall movie "Nine," The Paul Bettany movies "Creation" and "Legion." The end of the world spectacular, special effects laden movies "The Last Airbender" and "2012." And Dwayne Johnson in and as "The Tooth Fairy." Aging actors Mel Gibson in "Edge Of Darkness" and Sylvester Stallone in front of and behind the camera in "The Expendables" and "Rambo 5." Also "Lovely Still" - featuring Martin Landau & Ellen Burstyn. Matt Damon in the Paul Greengrass movie "Green Zone." Jake Gyllenhaal as "Prince of Persia" and Rose McGowan as "Red Sonja 2010." And Seth Rogen is "The Green Hornet." "Witchblade 2010," as well as sequels: "Nanny McPhee 2" and "Narnia 3" and everything from Daniel Radcliffe (naked at WAM and fully clothed) in "Harry Potter 7: Part 1," to the Disney 3D films "Cars 2" and "Toy Story 3." Michael Douglas in "Wall Street 2." And the requisites, "Cloverfield 2" and "Iron Man 2." Need more movies? "Planet 51" and the big screen adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's "The Road" - finally - with a release date in November 2009. Also, Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio's two year delayed next collaboration, "Shutter Island." In addition, "The Escapist," and Peter Jackson's "The Lovely Bones" and "The Hobbit Movies." And Kenneth Branagh's "Thor." Also "The Smurfs Movie" and the big screen version of Steven Spielberg's "Lincoln" and Ben Stiller's "Chicago 7." And a slew of animated and non animated Walt Disney and non Disney movies, many in 3D: including the long gestating Jim Carey movie "Disney's A Christmas Carol" and "The Smurfs" and "Fraggle Rock: The Movie" and "The King of the Elves" and "Rapunzel," "The Bear and the Bow;" "Newt," "The Princess And The Frog." And also "How To Train Your Dragon." How about Heath Ledger's final movie, "Dr. Parnassus." The four Jonas Brothers in the big screen adaptation of "Walter The Farting Dog" and Wesley Snipes in "Gallowwalker!" Also: Zac Efron naked but not in "Me And Orson Welles." Also, Chace Crawford in "Footloose 2010." Benicio Del Toro as "The Wolfman." And James ("Titanic") Cameron's "Avatar;" and Robert Downey Jr. as "Sherlock Holmes." In addition, the sequels to "Twilight," (the movies in the "Twilight" film franchise), "Eclipse" and "New Moon," all starring Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart. And, "Captain America." Also, check out all of the "2008 Movies" that were released in movie theaters. We also bring you "2010 Oscars" pre-coverage - and the movie trailers and movie posters of all "2009 Movies" & "2010 Movies" in theaters, including today's IN THE SPOTLIGHT - "A Single Man"... (continue)




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