Audio problem: In the scene where Sharon Stone is talking to Joe Pesci about how De Niro had his guys beat up James Woods, at one point Sharon Stone says, 'Oh C'mon.' If you look closely her mouth doesn't move at all. Also if you listen closely, that line comes out on surround sound. When she continues her line it comes out on mono. It was obviously recorded.
- Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene Clip
- Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene Art
- Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene On Tv
- Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene
- Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene Gif
- Joe Pesci Casino Pen Scene
Continuity mistake: When DeNiro catches the cheats at the card tables, he takes the one with the beard to smash his hand with a hammer. In the first shot the guard is holding the cheat down by the wrist, but in the next shot the guard's hand is up by the guy's elbow.
Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene can be withdrawn. Stake Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene using bonus is £5. Skrill and Neteller deposits are excluded from this offer. Eligibility restrictions apply. Full T&Cs apply. 88ProBet is the most trusted online casino in Singapore. We give you promotions that are in your expectations and welcome you to play our variety of games. We offer the best odds Joe Pesci Casino Pen Scene in the industry and we give out real cash to our bettors everyday! There's a scene in Casino (1995) where Joe Pesci's character rebukes a bar patron's boorish behavior by stabbing him repeatedly with a fountain pen. That's got to be bad for the nib, but it wasn't his pen. Looked like a nice one, but again I can't say what it was. One that I did identify with a fair amount of certainty was in The Grey (2011).
167 thoughts on ' 'Casino' – Pen Scene HD ' Tero Vahlroos says: March 4, 2020 at 7:19 pm. Thank goodness Joe Pesci was not doing this Pen scene in The.
Other mistake: In the scene after De Niro's car explodes, they show him being put in the ambulance feet first. Patients are always put in head first.
Continuity mistake: When Joe Pesci and his brother are beaten at the end, Dominick is thrown in the pit and facing one direction, after Joe Pesci is beaten and thrown on top, Dominick is facing the opposite direction than he was originally.(02:48:30)
Factual error: When Ace is watching the news report about the investigation of his gaming license and crime connections, you can see the Mirage Hotel in the background of the news studio. The Mirage was not opened until late 1989, and the movie takes place well before that.
james121515Continuity mistake: When De Niro catches Stone and Woods in the restaurant, De Niro takes out some money from his coat pocket and lays it on the table. In one shot the money is straight, in another it is diagonal and in the final shot before De Niro picks it up it is straight again.
Tobin OReillyContinuity mistake: When Ginger is arguing with the gambler at the craps table about 'giving her a bigger cut', the man reaches for her purse to show her the chips she's been stealing from him. As she pulls the purse back, the gold chain strap breaks. The next shot of Ginger shows a repaired chain.
Factual error: When Joe Pesci is driving to meet De Niro, he has to change cars. The scene right before going to the garage, they show Pesci's car driving around a corner and at the bottom right of the screen, you see a lamp post with a bus sign on it that reads CAT. CAT (Citizen's Area Transit) wasn't established in Las Vegas until late 80's early 90's. Before that it was the Las Vegas Transit. This scene was supposed to be late 70's, early 80's..
Audio problem: Ace yells 'come with me now' over and over while dragging Ginger out of the house after overhearing her trying to have him whacked. DeNiro's lips are not moving while he's yelling.
Audio problem: When Nicky and Frank rough up one of their debtors, Frank tells him to smarten up, but his mouth doesn't move.(00:31:55)
Cubs FanContinuity mistake: Jennifer has the diamonds inside her hair bun and she's shaking it to retrieve the diamonds onto the table. As Santoro slaps her face as a gesture to thank her and for her not to get smart with him, her hair bun comes loose and falls out into a pony tail. The next shot then shows Jennifer with the hair bun perfectly groomed again on top of her head.
GisellaContinuity mistake: When Nicky has the guy's head in a vise, after it squirts Nicky's hair changes between shots, from neat to messed up.
Continuity mistake: In the scene towards the end before De Niro's car explodes, in the first shot when he opens the door its window is down as he gets in the car, but in the next shot as his motions are replayed, when he opens the door that window is all the way up, then it's down again in following shots.(02:46:00)
Continuity mistake: Before Pesci stabs the pen, DeNiro asks a guy if it's his pen. A glass on the right, inches away from the napkin where the pen was laying, appears and disappears between shots.
SachaContinuity mistake: Before the pen-stabbed-in the neck scene Joe Pesci is talking with a guy about placing some bets. A coffee cup and saucer suddenly appear on the table after Pesci leaves the place.
SachaContinuity mistake: When news on Robert De Niro not having a casino license first hits the airwaves, the news broadcast displays a still picture of Joe Pesci having a conversation with his friend Frankie. The picture that they use is when Pesci and Frankie have tooth picks in their mouths because they don't want FBI agents lip reading what they are saying. But that didn't happen until later on in the movie. So how could they have displayed a picture of a conversation that hadn't taken place yet?
Continuity mistake: When De Niro is proposing to Sharon Stone, the position of his head is not continuous between the front and back shots.
SachaContinuity mistake: When Ace is having a meeting with Green about him firing the cowboy, Ace stubs out his cigarette. In the next shot from behind Ace is still smoking, but when in the front he has no cigarette.
Hierarquia naipes poker game. Continuity mistake: When Nicky goes to Sam's house to meet with Charlie, it's very light outside when he arrives. However when he leaves about four minutes later, the sun is setting. His entire stay at the house takes place during that scene.
Character mistake: When the high roller Ikachawa returns to The Tangiers, Rothstein said he's betting $1,000 instead of his usual $30,000, so when he won, it didn't feel like he had won $10,000 (10 $1,000 bets), but felt like he lost $90,000, alluding to the fact that betting 1/30th of his normal bets made him feel even though he was winning $1k a hand he was missing out on the other $29k, or losing that. At ten hands won, at $1k/hand, he really would have felt like he was losing $290,000, not $90,000 as Rothstein says.
Michael PreteTony Spilotro inspired Joe Pesci's villain in the movie Casino, but the real man was far worse than the movie let on.
Getty ImagesBy age 22, the unwieldy Tony Spilotro had been arrested at least 13 times.
Among the many Mafia movies, one standout is Martin Scorsese's Casino — and particularly for the violence. Robert De Niro stars as a Jewish gangster who runs Las Vegas casinos for the Chicago Outfit, with Joe Pesci playing Nicky Santoro, the barbaric mob enforcer who protects him. In real life, Pesci's role was inspired by the brutal life of Tony Spilotro: and his truth is even more disturbing than the film version.
Indeed, Anthony Spilotro's unique taste for violence would not only establish him as one of the most fearsome mobsters of the '60s and '70s, but also spell his own bloody doom.
Becoming Tough Tony Spilotro
Tony Spilotro might be best known for his success in protecting the Las Vegas casino rackets, but he started out like so many other Mafiosi: as a low-level gangster in Chicago.
He was born in the Windy City on May 19, 1938. FBI agent William Roemer remarked in his biography on Spilotro, titled Enforcer, that Spilotro grew up the fourth of six sons in an Italian household. His dad, Patsy, ran a popular Italian restaurant that was frequented by mobsters like Sam Giancana.
Four of the five Spilotro boys fell in with some criminal elements, which likely wasn't helped by the fact that their dad died young. Only one of Spilotro's brothers went to college and became a respected doctor.
Tony Spilotro became a high school bully before dropping out. He grew a reputation for small crimes like shoplifting and purse snatching. Dubbed a 'pissant' by friends and enemies alike, Spilotro received a nickname 'Ant.' Alternatively, he was called 'the Ant' in reference to his small stature: Spilotro stood five feet, two inches.
Spilotro's mugshot in '74.
At sixteen or seventeen, depending on the source, Spilotro was arrested for the first time on charges of larceny. By age 22, he'd been arrested more than a dozen times.
He became a ripe prospect for the Chicago Outfit and drew the notice of one Sam 'Mad Dog' DeStefano. The former Chicago cop-turned-Mafia errand boy Mike Corbitt recalled of DeStefano, 'He was a real sicko. He would do things to disrespect you, like coming into a bar and pissing on the floor in front of your wife.'
DeStefano took Spilotro under his wing and set up the young man for his next big venture in his criminal career: murder.
Getty ImagesAnthony Spilotro and his wife, Nancy, leave the federal building in Las Vegas after a mistrial was declared in his trail on racketeering charges.
Tony Spilotro And The M&M Murders
Under the thumb of the uber-violent DeStefano, Spilotro got the chance to become a 'made man,' or a full member of the Mafia. This opportunity came when he was asked to handle the so-called M&M Boys. The 'M&M' in question were two minor thugs: Billy McCarthy and Jimmy Miraglia, who killed several local businessmen due to a drunken argument. Killing legit businesspeople in a neighborhood of mobsters was a no-no, especially as it brought attention to the Mob.
In 1962, Spilotro was dispatched to take care of the M&M Boys, which inspired the infamous torture scene in Casino. Spilotro and buddies — including DeStefano — beat up McCarthy, then stabbed him through the testicles with ice picks. Then, Spilotro 'put his captive's head in a vise and squeezed, then squeezed some more,' according to Dennis Griffin's Policing Las Vegas, until one of McCarthy's eyes popped out. In Casino, McCarthy is portrayed by a one 'Tony Dogs,' but the scene is as brutal as possible on screen.
Finally, McCarthy gave up Miraglia. Eventually, people uncovered the mangled bodies of both Miraglia and McCarthy, their throats slit, in a car on the South Side of Chicago.
Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene Clip
In 1963, Spilotro followed up on his murderous success by killing real estate broker Leo Foreman, who'd gotten on the wrong side of DeStefano. Dragging Foreman down to a cellar, Spilotro hammered Foreman's private parts, then attacked him with an ice pick, and only then shot him in the head. He dropped the body off in a car trunk as well.
When he was discovered, the corpse of Foreman had chunks of his body removed before he was killed.
Audio problem: When Nicky and Frank rough up one of their debtors, Frank tells him to smarten up, but his mouth doesn't move.(00:31:55)
Cubs FanContinuity mistake: Jennifer has the diamonds inside her hair bun and she's shaking it to retrieve the diamonds onto the table. As Santoro slaps her face as a gesture to thank her and for her not to get smart with him, her hair bun comes loose and falls out into a pony tail. The next shot then shows Jennifer with the hair bun perfectly groomed again on top of her head.
GisellaContinuity mistake: When Nicky has the guy's head in a vise, after it squirts Nicky's hair changes between shots, from neat to messed up.
Continuity mistake: In the scene towards the end before De Niro's car explodes, in the first shot when he opens the door its window is down as he gets in the car, but in the next shot as his motions are replayed, when he opens the door that window is all the way up, then it's down again in following shots.(02:46:00)
Continuity mistake: Before Pesci stabs the pen, DeNiro asks a guy if it's his pen. A glass on the right, inches away from the napkin where the pen was laying, appears and disappears between shots.
SachaContinuity mistake: Before the pen-stabbed-in the neck scene Joe Pesci is talking with a guy about placing some bets. A coffee cup and saucer suddenly appear on the table after Pesci leaves the place.
SachaContinuity mistake: When news on Robert De Niro not having a casino license first hits the airwaves, the news broadcast displays a still picture of Joe Pesci having a conversation with his friend Frankie. The picture that they use is when Pesci and Frankie have tooth picks in their mouths because they don't want FBI agents lip reading what they are saying. But that didn't happen until later on in the movie. So how could they have displayed a picture of a conversation that hadn't taken place yet?
Continuity mistake: When De Niro is proposing to Sharon Stone, the position of his head is not continuous between the front and back shots.
SachaContinuity mistake: When Ace is having a meeting with Green about him firing the cowboy, Ace stubs out his cigarette. In the next shot from behind Ace is still smoking, but when in the front he has no cigarette.
Hierarquia naipes poker game. Continuity mistake: When Nicky goes to Sam's house to meet with Charlie, it's very light outside when he arrives. However when he leaves about four minutes later, the sun is setting. His entire stay at the house takes place during that scene.
Character mistake: When the high roller Ikachawa returns to The Tangiers, Rothstein said he's betting $1,000 instead of his usual $30,000, so when he won, it didn't feel like he had won $10,000 (10 $1,000 bets), but felt like he lost $90,000, alluding to the fact that betting 1/30th of his normal bets made him feel even though he was winning $1k a hand he was missing out on the other $29k, or losing that. At ten hands won, at $1k/hand, he really would have felt like he was losing $290,000, not $90,000 as Rothstein says.
Michael PreteTony Spilotro inspired Joe Pesci's villain in the movie Casino, but the real man was far worse than the movie let on.
Getty ImagesBy age 22, the unwieldy Tony Spilotro had been arrested at least 13 times.
Among the many Mafia movies, one standout is Martin Scorsese's Casino — and particularly for the violence. Robert De Niro stars as a Jewish gangster who runs Las Vegas casinos for the Chicago Outfit, with Joe Pesci playing Nicky Santoro, the barbaric mob enforcer who protects him. In real life, Pesci's role was inspired by the brutal life of Tony Spilotro: and his truth is even more disturbing than the film version.
Indeed, Anthony Spilotro's unique taste for violence would not only establish him as one of the most fearsome mobsters of the '60s and '70s, but also spell his own bloody doom.
Becoming Tough Tony Spilotro
Tony Spilotro might be best known for his success in protecting the Las Vegas casino rackets, but he started out like so many other Mafiosi: as a low-level gangster in Chicago.
He was born in the Windy City on May 19, 1938. FBI agent William Roemer remarked in his biography on Spilotro, titled Enforcer, that Spilotro grew up the fourth of six sons in an Italian household. His dad, Patsy, ran a popular Italian restaurant that was frequented by mobsters like Sam Giancana.
Four of the five Spilotro boys fell in with some criminal elements, which likely wasn't helped by the fact that their dad died young. Only one of Spilotro's brothers went to college and became a respected doctor.
Tony Spilotro became a high school bully before dropping out. He grew a reputation for small crimes like shoplifting and purse snatching. Dubbed a 'pissant' by friends and enemies alike, Spilotro received a nickname 'Ant.' Alternatively, he was called 'the Ant' in reference to his small stature: Spilotro stood five feet, two inches.
Spilotro's mugshot in '74.
At sixteen or seventeen, depending on the source, Spilotro was arrested for the first time on charges of larceny. By age 22, he'd been arrested more than a dozen times.
He became a ripe prospect for the Chicago Outfit and drew the notice of one Sam 'Mad Dog' DeStefano. The former Chicago cop-turned-Mafia errand boy Mike Corbitt recalled of DeStefano, 'He was a real sicko. He would do things to disrespect you, like coming into a bar and pissing on the floor in front of your wife.'
DeStefano took Spilotro under his wing and set up the young man for his next big venture in his criminal career: murder.
Getty ImagesAnthony Spilotro and his wife, Nancy, leave the federal building in Las Vegas after a mistrial was declared in his trail on racketeering charges.
Tony Spilotro And The M&M Murders
Under the thumb of the uber-violent DeStefano, Spilotro got the chance to become a 'made man,' or a full member of the Mafia. This opportunity came when he was asked to handle the so-called M&M Boys. The 'M&M' in question were two minor thugs: Billy McCarthy and Jimmy Miraglia, who killed several local businessmen due to a drunken argument. Killing legit businesspeople in a neighborhood of mobsters was a no-no, especially as it brought attention to the Mob.
In 1962, Spilotro was dispatched to take care of the M&M Boys, which inspired the infamous torture scene in Casino. Spilotro and buddies — including DeStefano — beat up McCarthy, then stabbed him through the testicles with ice picks. Then, Spilotro 'put his captive's head in a vise and squeezed, then squeezed some more,' according to Dennis Griffin's Policing Las Vegas, until one of McCarthy's eyes popped out. In Casino, McCarthy is portrayed by a one 'Tony Dogs,' but the scene is as brutal as possible on screen.
Finally, McCarthy gave up Miraglia. Eventually, people uncovered the mangled bodies of both Miraglia and McCarthy, their throats slit, in a car on the South Side of Chicago.
Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene Clip
In 1963, Spilotro followed up on his murderous success by killing real estate broker Leo Foreman, who'd gotten on the wrong side of DeStefano. Dragging Foreman down to a cellar, Spilotro hammered Foreman's private parts, then attacked him with an ice pick, and only then shot him in the head. He dropped the body off in a car trunk as well.
When he was discovered, the corpse of Foreman had chunks of his body removed before he was killed.
Viva Las Vegas
Phil Greer/Chicago Tribune/MCT via Getty ImagesMichael Spilotro, left, and his brother Tony.
Spilotro was well known even in the mob by this point for his brutality. But it didn't keep him from rising the ranks of their lucrative operations in Vegas.
The Chicago Outfit controlled the Las Vegas casinos and skimmed a bunch of cash off it for itself. To make the operation seem legit, Dennis Griffin noted in The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. The Mob, the Mafia put a man known as Frank 'Lefty' Rosenthal in charge of the gambling operation. The Jewish Rosenthal served as the inspiration for De Niro's character in Casino, Sam Rothstein, who makes the Mob's skimming operations seem legit.
Spilotro's role was to keep the mobsters working for the Chicago Outfit in line while in Vegas. If any of them tried to take cash where they weren't supposed to, Spilotro would wield his infamous ice pick and/or fists. He was also supposed to grab as much cash from the casino before it was officially logged in, i.e. 'skim.'
In Casino, Joe Pesci's Nicky Santoro serves this role. In the film, Santoro's bad temper gets him banned from most Las Vegas casinos and according to Nicholas Pileggi's book Casino: Love and Honor in Las Vegas, Spilotro also had a notorious anger problem. Pileggi quoted mob enforcer Frank Cullotta as saying that Spilotro grew jealous of Lefty's fame and fortune as the legit face of the casino.
He said, 'Tony sees Lefty walk in the joint, and everybody jumps up to shake his hand. And Lefty's loving it. Tony's just watching. He's getting pissed, especially when Lefty doesn't even nod over in Tony's direction for respect.'
So Spilotro decided to branch out on his own and tap into his old skill—theft. He kick-started a group of burglars, arsonists, and thieves called 'the Hole-in-the-Wall Gang.' They earned their moniker by busting through walls to get at precious jewelry and other expensive goodies to hawk on the Strip. He even opened his own shop, The Gold Rush, with brother Michael to sell his stolen stuff.
By 1974, the los Angeles Times reported that there was more gangland crime in Las Vegas than ever before, and perhaps with Spilotro to thank for that. By this time, the unwieldy gangster had already been indicted for murder several times.
Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene Art
Tony Spilotro's Downfall
But there was more than just bad professional blood between Rosenthal and Spilotro. Rosenthal had married showgirl-turned-girl about town Geri McGee. A former waitress at the famed Tropicana club in Vegas, McGee snared Rosenthal and gambled away tons of his money after she won his heart. In Casino, Sharon Stone plays the McGee-inspired dancer Ginger McKenna and she's rather true to life.
The Rosenthals' relationship soon soured, though. Just as Rothstein's wife fell into bed with her hubby's arch-rival Santoro, so too did McGee have a torrid affair with Spilotro.
At one point in 1982, Spilotro allegedly tried to car-bomb Rosenthal following McGee's drug-induced suicide. The attack failed, but the repercussions of his affair with Rosenthal's wife continued to upset the Vegas mob.
Eventually, this incident together with Spilotro's other misdeeds caught up to him. Since he was a made man at 25, Spilotro had caught the eye of law enforcement. Naturally, too much attention on the mob spelled danger, which meant Spilotro was a major liability.
Spilotro was arrested again in 1981 after cops caught the Hole-in-the-Wall Gang trying to rob a home goods store in Vegas — thanks to an informant on the inside.
Having Spilotro's name emblazoned across the news once again didn't sit well with the Chicago Outfit anymore. William Roemer told The LA Times that 'Spilotro wasn't doing his job in Las Vegas. He maintained too high a profile there. Mobsters flourish in darkness. Spilotro, facing three major trials, was obviously not following that dictum. He was under the glare of the harshest spotlight.'
Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene On Tv
Spilotro was slapped with numerous charges and suspected of a number of other crimes, including the attempted murder of Rosenthal in a 1982 car bombing.
Bettmann/Contributor/Getty ImagesAnthony Spilotro sits in a Las Vegas courtroom in connection with two old homicide cases. 1983.
Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene
The Mob thus decided to off Spilotro and his brother, Michael. They were beaten to death in 1986, their bodies left in an Indiana cornfield.
Casino Joe Pesci Pen Scene Gif
In 2007, three Mafiosi were finally convicted of the Spilotro brothers' killings.
Joe Pesci Casino Pen Scene
In this case, the film Casino truly imitated life – except for the fact, that unlike Santoro, Spilotro was not buried alive, though he was subjected to a torturous end that befitted a mobster as cruel as he was.
After this look at the bloodlusty mobster, Tony Spilotro, dive into an equally horrifying tale: the story behind the film The Conjuring. Then, check out the amazing true tale of Desmond Doss, a World War II hero.