Most Famous Gamblers

 
Most Famous Gamblers 8,8/10 3156 votes

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  1. Who Is The Greatest Gambler Of All Time
  2. 10 Most Famous Gamblers
God of Gamblers
Traditional賭神 Doe San
Simplified赌神
MandarinDǔ Shén
CantoneseDou2 San4
Directed byWong Jing
Produced byJimmy Heung
Written byWong Jing
StarringChow Yun-fat
Andy Lau
Music byLowell Lo
Sherman Chow
CinematographyPeter Pau
David Chung
Edited byChoi Hung
Distributed byWin's Movie Production & I/E Co. Ltd.
Release date
Running time
126 min
CountryHong Kong
LanguageCantonese
Box officeHK$37,058,686[1]

God of Gamblers (Chinese: 賭神; lit. God of Gambling) is a 1989 Hong Kong action comedy-drama film written and directed by Wong Jing featuring an all-star cast led by Chow Yun-fat and Andy Lau.

Plot[edit]

Ko Chun (Chow Yun-fat) is a world-famous gambler, so renowned and talented at winning various games of chance that he is referred to as the 'God of Gamblers'. He keeps his identity secret from the public (and avoids photographs so his face is not recognized), but is known for three characteristics: his slicked-back hairstyle, his love of Feodora brand chocolate, and his jade pinky ring.

Ko Chun arrives in Tokyo, accompanied by his girlfriend Janet and his assistant and cousin Ko Yee, for a match with Tanaka, the country's top ranked gambler. After convincingly defeating Tanaka in games of Mahjong and dice, Tanaka concedes defeat and asserts that Ko Chun 'really [is] God'.

Tanaka asks Chun to help him take revenge on Chan Kam-Sing aka the 'Demon of Gamblers', a famous Singaporean gambler who cheated Tanaka's father before driving him to suicide, by besting Chan in a high-stakes poker match. Ko Chun agrees, merely asking for a box of chocolate as payment. In gratitude, Tanaka sends his bodyguard, former Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces Operative, Dragon, (Charles Heung), to accompany Ko Chun for protection.

Meanwhile, Little Knife (Andy Lau), an avid but mediocre gambler who idolises the God of Gamblers, sets a trap for an Indian neighbour as a practical joke. After a fight on a train between Ko Chun, Dragon, and henchmen sent by one of Ko Chun's rivals, Ko happens to accidentally stumble into Knife's trap. Ko falls down a hill, hitting his head, and subsequently suffers from amnesia and regresses to a childlike state.

Gamblers

Knife, not knowing who the unnamed stranger is, takes him in and names him 'Chocolate' due to the man's seemingly obsessive love for the candy. Initially Knife is impatient with Chocolate's childish innocence and often yells at him, but soon recognises that 'Chocolate' has innate gambling talent and begins to exploit his abilities in local poker games and gambling dens. As time passes, Knife comes to care for Chocolate and seeks to find a way to restore his memory.

Back at Ko Chun's mansion, it is revealed that Janet has been searching for Chun for ten days to no avail. Ko Yee, who is jealous of Chun's success and wealth, makes advances on her, which she rejects; finally, while attempting to rape her, Yee accidentally knocks Janet off the balcony, killing her. He discovers that she has been recording what has been transpiring and proceeds to burn the tape. Later, Yee allies himself with Chan Kam-Sing and Ko Chun's other rival and they send assassins to find and kill Chun.

Eventually, the assassins find Chun, Knife, and their friends and attempt to kill them, but Dragon arrives to protect them after tracking Chun down. A fierce shootout ensues in a shopping center, in which Knife saves Chun from an attempt on his life by Ko Yee. During the fight, Dragon is wounded, causing Chun to snap out of his child persona briefly to kill the rest of the assailants. However, after regressing back to his childlike state, Chun becomes horrified at the carnage and runs out into the street where he is struck by a vehicle.

Who Is The Greatest Gambler Of All Time

Chun awakens in the hospital with his regular persona, but no memory of the events or people he met after the fight. He is informed by Ko Yee, who is feigning loyalty, that Janet has disappeared. Knife arrives and attempts to warn Chun of Ko Yee's treachery but Yee has Knife thrown out. Later, Ko Yee gives Chan Kam-Sing special eyeglasses that will allow him to cheat during his upcoming poker match with Chun by reading invisible markings on the cards.

Chun, Yee, Tanaka and Dragon arrive on Chan Kam-Sing's yacht for the climactic game of five-card stud. Knife, having sneaked onto the boat, again attempts to warn Chun of the danger he is in. Chun agrees to hear Knife out later but admonishes him not to interfere with the poker game.

With his ability to see the markings on the cards, Chan Kam-Sing dominates the first two rounds. After losing all of Tanaka's money, Ko Chun puts up his entire personal portfolio of wealth and holdings against Chan's wealth. Chan, using his glasses to see that Ko Chun has an inferior hand, agrees, showing his cards and gloating over his victory. Ko Chun, in turn, reveals that he actually has the superior hand and has won the game, having secretly altered the markings of the deck and using special contact lenses to read them.

Subsequently, Ko Chun tricks Chan Kam-Sing into shooting Ko Yee. As Yee lies dying, Chun drops Janet's tape (which actually never finished burning) onto his body. Ko Chun then departs (as police arrive to take Chan into custody for murder) without speaking to Knife, much to the latter's dismay.

Ko Chun later surprises Knife at his home and reveals that he remembered Knife in the hospital and knew about Ko Yee's betrayal all along, but had to feign ignorance to execute his plan properly. He promises to make it up to Knife by taking him to Las Vegas as his gambling partner.

Cast[edit]

  • Chow Yun-fat as (高進/賭神) Ko Chun / The God of Gamblers / Chocolate (nickname given to him when he loses his memory)
  • Andy Lau as (陳刀仔) Michael Chan/ Little Knife / Dagger
  • Joey Wong as (珍) Jane/Jen
  • Sharla Cheung as Janet
  • Charles Heung as (龍五) Lung Ng/Dragon (once served in special force under Nguyễn Văn Thiệu)
  • Ng Man-tat as (花柳成) Brother Shing
  • Edison Lim as (林氏大赌徒)Biggest Gambler in Lim’s Family
  • Jimmy Lung Fong as (高義) Ko Yee
  • Michiko Nishiwaki as (—菊子) Miss Chi, Ko Chun's female Yakuza opponent
  • Wong Jing as Whoremonger in love motel (cameo)
  • Shing Fui-On as (大口九) Big Mouth
  • Michael Chow as Casino manager
  • Pau Hon-lam as (陳金城) Chan Kam-sing
  • Dennis Chan as (黃美強醫生) Doctor Toneg Wong
  • Chan Lap-ban as Michael's grandmother
  • Law Ching-ho as Motel manager
  • Yasuyoshi Shikamura as (上山宏次) Ueyama Koji
  • Ronald Wong as (烏鴉) Crow
  • Wong San as Jane's father
  • Yeung Chak-lam as (南哥) Nam
  • Seung-koon Yuk as Jane's mother

[2][3]

Most Famous Gamblers

Gamblers franchise[edit]

The success of the film spawned many sequels, spin-offs and parodies. The parody All for the Winner starring Stephen Chow led to two comedy-driven God of Gamblers sequels also starring Stephen Chow, followed by a more serious direct sequel with Chow Yun-Fat reprising his role as Ko Chun.

God of Gamblers series:

  • God of Gamblers (1989)
  • All for the Winner (1990) – Stephen Chow is the Saint of Gamblers in this popular God of Gamblers parody.
  • God of Gamblers II (1990) – This film continues where the original God of Gamblers storyline left off. This time, Andy Lau's character teams up with Stephen Chow's character from All for the Winner. Chow Yun-fat did not return for this film, but his God of Gambler character did show up for a brief cameo appearance using archive footage.
  • God of Gamblers III: Back to Shanghai (1991) - A sequel to God of Gamblers II starring Stephen Chow. He accidentally goes back in time to Shanghai in 1937, and tries to figure out how to return to Hong Kong in 1991.
  • God of Gamblers Returns (1994) – Also released under the name God of Gamblers 2 (but not God of Gamblers II) this is the 'true' sequel to the original God of Gamblers film, with Chow Yun-fat back to reprise his role as the God of Gamblers.
  • God of Gamblers 3: The Early Stage (1997) – A successful prequel of the original God of Gamblers, starring Leon Lai as Ko Chun. It may be assumed that this is a reboot to the God of Gamblers series because of the inconsistencies with the previously established story of God of Gamblers e.g. Ko Chun and his bodyguard, meet for the very first time in the first film and therefore should not know each other in this prequel.
  • From Vegas to Macau (2014) - This film once again stars Chow Yun-fat as a gifted gambler, though his character and the film's plot is unrelated to the God of Gamblers series. However, Chow (in a dual role) makes a cameo appearance as the original God of Gamblers, Ko Chun, at the end of the film. The film also ends with a remixed version of the original God of Gamblers theme music.
  • From Vegas to Macau II (2015) - Chow Yun-fat returns as the gifted gambler, Ken. The film's plot is, again, unrelated to the God of Gamblers series. The film also ends with a remixed version of the original God of Gamblers theme music as Chow (in a dual role) makes a cameo appearance as the original God of Gamblers, Ko Chun at the end of the film. Andy Lau also makes a cameo appearance and reprises his role in the original God of Gamblers as Little Knife.
  • From Vegas to Macau III (2016)

Spin-offs:

  • The Top Bet (1991) – This is a spin-off of All for the Winner, with only a few characters from the original reprising their role. Stephen Chow did, however, make a cameo appearance in this spin-off. The film stars Anita Mui and Carol Cheng.
  • Fist of Fury 1991 (1991) – Stephen Chow's Saint of Gamblers character does a brief cameo appearance at the start of this film.
  • Fist of Fury 1991 II (1992) – Sequel to the first movie. The plot continues where Fist of Fury 1991 ended.
  • Saint of Gamblers (1995) – A spin-off of the All for the Winner series, with only Ng Man-tat reprising his role.
  • My Wife is a Gambling Maestro (2008) – A parody of the first film directed by Wong Jing, but with a completely different cast and a romantic comedy plotline

Soundtrack[edit]

The most notable soundtrack of the film is the main theme song composed by Lowell Lo. The theme song has since been featured in sequels and spinoffs.

In 2016, DJ and music producer Eugene Luu (best known for Chinese PopEDM crossovers) released a Dubstep remix of the theme song on YouTube which has over 50,000 views (as of September 2017), coinciding with the release of the spin-off series sequel From Vegas to Macau III.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^God of Gamblers (1989) – HKMDB
  2. ^'God of Gamblers'. imdb.com. Retrieved 23 July 2010.
  3. ^'God of Gamblers'. chinesemov.com. Retrieved 23 July 2010.
  4. ^賭城風雲III (賭神 Eugene Luu Remix) 電影歌曲 – YouTube

External links[edit]

  • God of Gamblers at IMDb
  • God of Gamblers at Rotten Tomatoes
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=God_of_Gamblers&oldid=1010131080'
A number of well known folks have died on their birthdays. Here's 14 of the most famous of them.

10 Most Famous Gamblers

Renowned Renaissance painter Raphael died April 6, 1520, his 37th birthday.
William Shakespeare, a.k.a. The Bard, passed away on April 23, 1616, what is thought to be his 52nd birthday.
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Edna May Oliver, a popular character actress in early Hollywood who earned an Oscar nomination for her supporting role in 1939's 'Drums Along the Mohawk,' died on her 59th birthday -- November 9, 1942 -- following an intestinal ailment. (By the way, Hattie McDaniel won the Oscar that year for 'Gone With the Wind.)
George Francis Barnes (a.k.a. Machine Gun Kelly), the Prohibition-era gangster, died in prison of a heart attack on July 18, 1954, his 59th birthday.
Early jazz saxophonist Sidney Bechet died of lung cancer on May 14, 1959, his 62nd birthday.
Swede Risberg, an early 20th century baseball player best known for being one of the members of the 1919 Chicago White Sox team accused of intentionally losing the World Series in exchange for payments from gamblers, died on his 81st birthday on Oct. 13, 1975.
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Country singer Mel Street died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on his 43rd birthday, on Oct. 21, 1978.
Ingrid Bergman, three-time Oscar winner and one of the biggest stars in the history of cinema, died of breast cancer on Aug. 29, 1982, her 67th birthday.
Corrie Ten Boom, who along with her family helped Jews escape the Holocaust when the Nazis invaded the Netherlands during World War II, died of a stroke on her 91st birthday on April 15, 1983.
Feminist activist Betty Friedan, who co-founded the National Organization for Women, died on her 85th birthday on Feb. 4, 2006.
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Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr., congressman and son of four-term U.S. president FDR, died on his 74th birthday on Aug. 17, 1988.
Mike Douglas, a Big Band-era singer, found a second career as the genial host of a syndicated daytime talk show in the 1960s and '70s that helped introduce stars like Barbra Streisand and Aretha Franklin. He died on August 11, 2006, exactly 81 years after he was born.
Big Band singer and actress Fran Warren died March 4, 2013, on her 87th birthday.
Country singer Merle Haggard died on April 6, 2016, his 79th birthday. Also Read:Merle Haggard, Country Music Legend, Dies at 79
Ed Aschoff, college football reporter for ESPN, died on his 34th birthday, Dec. 24, 2019, after a bout with pneumonia. Also Read:Ed Aschoff, ESPN College Football Reporter, Dies on His 34th Birthday
Milton Glaser, the graphic designer who created the 'I ❤ NY' logo and co-founded New York magazine, died on June 26, 2020, on his 91st birthday.