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Deal (2008)

Release Date:
Friday, April 25, 2008

MPAA Rating:
PG-13

Rating Reason:
For language, sexual content and brief drug use

Genre:
Drama

Starring:
Burt Reynolds, Charles Durning, Bret Harrison, Gary Grubbs, Shannon Elizabeth, Jennifer Tilly, Maria Mason

Written By:
Gil Cates Jr., Mark Weinstock

Director:
Gil Cates Jr.

Official Site:

Synopsis:
Set against the world of high stakes poker, DEAL follows the story of Tommy Vinson, an ex-gambler who quit the game of Texas Hold'em over 30 years ago after missing a family emergency and swearing to his wife, Helen, "never again". Tommy tries to be content with his luggage business but while watching a poker tournament on television, he sees someone who reminds him of his younger self, Alex Stillman.

Deal (2008) | Review

What's in Your Hand?
Elisabeth Leitch

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Overview
David Bruce, Webmaster

If you mixed ESPN's World Poker Tour with last week's TV movie of the month, you would pretty much have Deal. It is a movie about Texas Hold 'em, the tables at which it is played, and the players who fill its tournaments. At least half of the movie consists of actual Texas Hold 'em games. Sitting across from our main characters at almost every table are many of the most recognizable names of real life Texas Hold 'em royalty. And taking cues from the increasingly popular televised tournaments on which it is based, Deal mixes the spectator's view of the psychological battle at each table with the insider's knowledge of the cards in every player's hand for a surprisingly strong level of suspense almost every time the cards fly.

As the movie begins, we meet the young man who is about to join this world. Like Chris Moneymaker, the online poker champ turned Texas Hold 'em tournament regular, and Joe Bartholdi, the 26-year-old who won the World Series of Poker in 2006, Alex Stillman (Bret Harrison) is a young man with an unusual talent for cards that lands him in the big leagues just months after he graduates college. Although he loses his first tournament, he catches the attention of everyone watching, including retired poker legend Tommy Vinson (Burt Reynolds). After going from big winner to big loser twenty years before, Tommy had promised his wife he would never play cards again, and he hasn't. But after Tommy sees Alex on TV and runs into him at a local casino, he can't resist the urge to take the young man under his wing and teach him how to really play the game.

And it is from there that the story of the hotshot student and his old school teacher begins. Since Alex already has a clear understanding of the odds and numbers that Texas Hold 'em is all about, the movie does not deal with the mechanics or rules of the game at all. As such, if you are not a poker player yourself and decide to go see the movie, I highly suggest you take a few minutes to learn how the game is played before you watch. I didn't, and with much of the movie's suspense resting on that knowledge, I was completely out of the loop almost every time the cards hit the table.

But although much of the movie is about Texas Hold 'em, as Tommy tells Alex, the game of poker is about more than just the cards, and so is the movie. Most of what Tommy teaches Alex is about the players who hold the cards. "You don't play the cards," Tommy tells Alex. "You play the players." Whether you win or not does not just depend on how good your hand is, but on how good it is in comparison to the other hands at the table. As Tommy shows Alex, poker is about reading the other players. It is about figuring out their "tell." It is about knowing when they are bluffing. And it is about using that knowledge to bring them down.

Not only a game of logic and luck, poker is a lying game. Although it is your hand that will determine the win any time you actually have to show your cards, your ability to conceal disappointment or portray false confidence may win the pot simply because of what other players believe you hold. As Tommy tells Alex, putting that into practice in a few other areas of life might do him some good. But as the story shows us, although bluffing may win at the card tables and score well on a first date, in a real world where every relationship will eventually demand that we show our cards, lying will always cause us to lose.

After last month's money-focused 21, it also is interesting to note that Deal barely acknowledges money at all. Obviously the players have to pay into each tournament they enter. Chips reaching far into the millions are pushed across many a table throughout the movie. And Alex does comment once or twice on the value his winnings may have to his future. But as we watch every game, the focus is much more on the players' ability to play the game than the fact that they are winning chips. Unlike the card counting players in 21, the players in Deal are in the game to play it well. And when the final trophy of the movie is up for grabs, both loser and winner play their last cards with the knowledge that the value of the title is more about respect and honor than anything else.

Although Alex and Tommy have a falling out midway through the movie, the movie's closing scenes find them competing against each other at the final table of the World Poker Tournament. With teacher against student, the question is: Did Alex learn enough to beat his master? But as the two meet for the last time, they both show us how much more there is to poker than what can be taught. And ending the game with a move straight from the poker episode of Friends, Deal pushes us to see that sometimes the greatest triumphs in life are not in reading our fellow players and using what we see against them, but in reading them and giving them exactly what they need.

In this life, there will be many games we play. Most of them will involve others. Many of them will eagerly open the door for us to win if only we learn to take advantage of others' weaknesses. But as the end of Deal reveals, no matter what tournaments we enter and what tables we sit around, the most important lesson we can ever learn may be that the greatest wins will always be about more than a single game and the most valuable triumphs will often be in the plays and decisions that don't bring us anywhere near a trophy.

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