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The Card Player

2003 1h 43m Mystery & Thriller List
20% Tomatometer 10 Reviews 21% Audience Score 2,500+ Ratings
When a British tourist is kidnapped, lawman John Brennan (Liam Cunningham) heads to Rome to investigate -- and falls into the web of a devious serial killer known as "the card player." Linking up with the police via webcam, the murderer engages the officers in a grotesque game of video poker. If they win, the victim is freed; if they lose, they'll watch the victim die. Italian detective Anna Mari (Stefania Rocca) joins Brennan as they try to find the killer before the final card is played. Read More Read Less

Critics Reviews

View All (10) Critics Reviews
Dave Kehr New York Times Though it's based on a promisingly outrageous premise ... the film unfolds as a tired, thoroughly conventional police procedural that might as well be titled CSI: Roma. Rated: 1.5/5 Oct 6, 2004 Full Review V.A. Musetto New York Post Fans of the cult helmer who expect the usual gore will be disappointed -- but there are compensations. Rated: 2.5/4 Oct 6, 2004 Full Review Ed Gonzalez Slant Magazine Watching the online cards turn slowly (sometimes painfully so) in the film is to be reminded of how good Argento used to be when his aesthetic approach was less synthetic. Rated: 2/4 Jul 19, 2004 Full Review Anton Bitel Projected Figures Dario Argento's late-era, high-stakes, subpar giallo brings a poker face to its murderous (world wide) web of intrigue May 20, 2023 Full Review Film Threat Rated: 2/5 Dec 6, 2005 Full Review Jean-François Vandeuren Panorama Plutt embarrassant. Rated: 3/10 Nov 25, 2005 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Look, I'll come clean. I've outright written off Argento's post-Opera work without putting the work in, but that's because the films I have seen have upset me so greatly — and in no way a good way — that it felt like putting in the work to watch another one after Sleepless felt like, well, work. This was originally going to be a sequel to The Stendhal Syndrome and titled In the Dark, but everything changed when Asia Argento declined to be involved. The biggest issue is that the story is intrigiuing but as you wait for the visuals, nothing much happens. If this were any other director, I'd be fine with this movie. But with Argento, perhaps unfairly, I want more. I want bullets tearing through keyholes and eyeballs, bodies crashing through windows, menacing forests and colors that burn their way into my ventral occipital lobe. Instead, this looks no better than a TV procedural. The Card Player is a masked and black gloved killer who kindaps women in Rome, then challenges the police to play internet poker with him for their lives. If the police lose, they get to watch someone get tortured and killed Red Room-style online. There's a great close with a train bearing down on the killer and a victim who play poker right up to the end. Sure, the effect that follows is poor, but getting there isn't horible. What is bad is that this entire movie is based around watching people play video poker. While we can argue whether or not Argento was inventing Twitch, the fact is that 1972 Dario would shoot a poker game like cards were flying at us filled with mysery and menace. Instead, we simply watch cards slowly get dealt out. Man, Dario. I really want to see you do something great. And I get it. You already did. Maybe I should take it easier on you. But we always want more from the ones we love. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member While far from his strongest films, The Card Player at least has moments that remind the viewer why he's considered a Master of Horror. This is undermined by strange leaps of logic, lackluster dialogue, and the signature bad dubbing. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/18/23 Full Review Audience Member Yet another movie that makes you ask where and when Argento lost his magnificent visionary talent. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 02/26/23 Full Review jack c far from the best, but not the worst. hey, at least it's not Adrian Brody in dual roles http://cinetarium.blogspot.com/2015/10/spooktacular-savings-3-dario-argentos.html?zx=96d18de911691313 Rated 3 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member well I was liking the movie and then the ending happened. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/02/23 Full Review Audience Member Argento's The Card Player Brings The World Of Classic Crime Thriller Flicks Into The Computing World And Does It Successfully. Argento Is On Top Form, So Is His Cast & Crew. A Must See. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Card Player

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Movie Info

Synopsis When a British tourist is kidnapped, lawman John Brennan (Liam Cunningham) heads to Rome to investigate -- and falls into the web of a devious serial killer known as "the card player." Linking up with the police via webcam, the murderer engages the officers in a grotesque game of video poker. If they win, the victim is freed; if they lose, they'll watch the victim die. Italian detective Anna Mari (Stefania Rocca) joins Brennan as they try to find the killer before the final card is played.
Director
Dario Argento
Producer
Dario Argento, Claudio Argento
Screenwriter
Dario Argento, Franco Ferrini
Production Co
Medusa Produzione, Opera Film Produzione
Genre
Mystery & Thriller
Original Language
Italian
Release Date (DVD)
Aug 23, 2005
Runtime
1h 43m
Sound Mix
Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio
Flat (1.85:1)