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The Big Town

  • 1987
  • R
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Diane Lane and Matt Dillon in The Big Town (1987)
A dice roller falls in love with a talented dancer who happens to be the wife to a gangster.
Play trailer2:19
1 Video
42 Photos
DramaRomanceThriller

A dice roller falls in love with a talented dancer who happens to be the wife to a gangster.A dice roller falls in love with a talented dancer who happens to be the wife to a gangster.A dice roller falls in love with a talented dancer who happens to be the wife to a gangster.

  • Directors
    • Ben Bolt
    • Harold Becker
  • Writers
    • Clark Howard
    • Robert Roy Pool
  • Stars
    • Matt Dillon
    • Diane Lane
    • Tommy Lee Jones
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Ben Bolt
      • Harold Becker
    • Writers
      • Clark Howard
      • Robert Roy Pool
    • Stars
      • Matt Dillon
      • Diane Lane
      • Tommy Lee Jones
    • 29User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
    • 48Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:19
    Official Trailer

    Photos42

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Matt Dillon
    Matt Dillon
    • J.C. Cullen
    Diane Lane
    Diane Lane
    • Lorry
    Tommy Lee Jones
    Tommy Lee Jones
    • George
    Bruce Dern
    Bruce Dern
    • Mr. Edwards
    Lee Grant
    Lee Grant
    • Ferguson Edwards
    Tom Skerritt
    Tom Skerritt
    • Phil Carpenter
    Suzy Amis
    Suzy Amis
    • Aggie Donaldson
    David Marshall Grant
    David Marshall Grant
    • Sonny Binkley
    Don Francks
    Don Francks
    • Carl Hooker
    Del Close
    Del Close
    • Deacon Daniels
    Meg Hogarth
    Meg Hogarth
    • Dorothy Cullen
    Cherry Jones
    Cherry Jones
    • Ginger McDonald
    Alvaro D'Antonio
    • Prager
    • (as Mark Danton)
    David James Elliott
    David James Elliott
    • Cool Guy
    • (as David Elliott)
    Steve Yorke
    • Garage Boy
    Chris Owens
    Chris Owens
    • Garage Boy
    Sean McCann
    Sean McCann
    • Roy McMullin
    Kevin Fox
    • Boss' Son
    • Directors
      • Ben Bolt
      • Harold Becker
    • Writers
      • Clark Howard
      • Robert Roy Pool
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    5.92.7K
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    Featured reviews

    5mjneu59

    well made but flawed retro-noir

    Matt Dillon plays a hayseed crap shooter with unbeatable luck who, in late 1950s Chicago, joins a Windy City syndicate and falls hard for the femme fatale wife of an unscrupulous gambling boss. Despite some errors in casting this otherwise familiar urban crime story is, at least in presentation, a lot smarter than it may first appear. The relative youth of the two leads is fatally inconsistent with the very grown up crime and passion scenario, but director Ben Bolt wisely underplays the neo-Noir mood by refusing to rely on the trendy smoke-and-strobe-light pyrotechnics so common in modern thrillers. The gritty urban setting is instead recreated in all its cheap romantic glamour, and the script has its arcane gambling slang down pat, but the film is something of an anachronism in today's over-hyped market: a competent (if minor) drama, made thirty years too late.
    6lib-4

    luck be a lady tonight

    This is one of those movies you find on the television in the wee hours of the morning. Matt Dillon does a credible job as a young man trying to break into big time gambling- craps not a skilled game like poker. Of course, he is torn between two women- one good and one rather conniving. Tommy Lee Jones plays a man who wants to break this young upstart. The action is lively and the side stories keep the movie going. The music from the 50's is a nice addition to the sound track.
    Hollywood-3

    Extremely Underated Production

    The Big Town is an underrated movie. It boasts of a fantastic cast, and an interesting storyline, yet there are few who remember this movie. I suppose the screenplay and direction could have been better, yet this movie deserves more appreciation than it actually got. Matt Dillon puts in a good performance as the young shooter from a small town, trying to make it big with the 'throw of the dice'. But the man who steals the show is Tommy Lee Jones with an excellent performance as the old timer( a shooter himself) who doesn't think too kindly of the 'new kid on the block(Dillon). Diane Lane, better known for Murder at 1600, plays his wife, and Tom Skeritt and Suzy Amis are good in supporting roles. Amis, in particular, makes excellent use of her limited screen time. This movie is definitely recommended. Truly outstanding work by the entire cast.
    pool2000

    An undiscovered gem about gambling, sex, and growing up in a tough world

    This is Matt Dillon's best performance by far. This shows why everyone thinks he has such talent. But like most of his other work, this movie is dark and realistic about human nature -- in a word, truthful. All the characters have at least two levels -- the superficial level, and a deeper level which is usually darker and more warped, yet never exaggerated. This film also features a masterful performance by Tommy Lee Jones, an excellent job by Suzy Amis, and Diane Lane's most sensational, most lurid, and deepest performance ever in her depiction of a scheming strip tease queen, the ultimate femme fatale, yet a tortured little girl underneath.

    The script is very good, very insightful, very restrained in its depiction of a lurid underworld of raw emotion. It dramatizes a world of sin and depravity, yet the story is at core a morality play in which decency and morality not only survive but thrive in spite of extreme temptations.

    A good movie on every level.
    7TheFearmakers

    Neon Neo Noir

    With a deliberately sparse-pulpy title, THE BIG TOWN is set during the 1950's... 1957 to be exact... and Dillon really looks the part, a kind of throwback B&W-suited actor even in this neo noir's neon green and pink tinged color scheme, playing a young lucky dice player who miraculously hits the right numbers each and every time, giving the movie a sort of unintentional TWILIGHT ZONE science-fiction vibe, or something delving into fantasy...

    And for a vehicle so otherwise grounded and somewhat cliche, predictable and even mainstream, that's alright since Matt's urgency (and the film's suspense) doesn't rely on winning but surviving the pool of gambling hoodlum sharks who, from Tommy Lee Jones as an underground backroom dealer to a mysterious backstory Tom Skerritt, are out to (or seem out to) stop the endless and bizarre winning streak...

    The best scenes are during the first half when, starting with having been discovered and weened by local gambling mechanic Don Francks, everything is breezy and easy since all the characters are developed as much as can be (including an expository introducing-the-city David Marshall Green) - not always through dialogue but their sly manipulation to the sport of gambling, and thinking on their toes...

    Yet THE BIG TOWN is mostly known for being the third and final film Dillon starred alongside his RUMBLE FISH ingenue Diane Lane, which began most famously with THE OUTSIDERS, the only one they're not romantically involved... although her character finds his scoundrel rebel wild and attractive ("I might fall in love with him")...

    Much more grown up in looks and attitude, and seeming far more both an aesthetic and genre-period connection to Francis Ford Coppola's uninspired THE COTTON CLUB than the S. E. Hinton adaptations, Lane provides a sexy, borderline sinister Femme Fatale as Jones's stripper trophy girl...

    Without the usual 11th hour gunfire, her danger exists on who she's cheating on while Matt could be throwing away the perfect girl in Suzy Amis -- proving twenty-nine years after the demise of the Crime Genre that Film Noir good girls always have to weather hell before getting what they deserve, and getting who deserves them...

    A slow middle's made up for during the finale where Dillon must succeed with slightly more odds added on -- very similar to the more lightweight early-60's-set-comedy, THE FLAMINGO KID, in which he had to win everything with the skill of the game -- cards there, and craps here...

    In either game, be it skill or chance... which is chance here pretending to merit skill... Matt Dillon, a minimalist actor to begin with, has the kind of poker face expressions that helps the suspense build without a lot of action...

    He's an actor that's been in a some good, great and downright terrible films, but he's usually good no matter. Even when he seems a bit slow to the punch and lethargic, like happens on occasion here, or too streetwise and stubborn to stretch beyond particular tough guy roles, he's got range within limitations...

    In BIG TOWN, it's a steady gaze across a long green table. And hell, maybe he'd have worked in COLOR OF MONEY if that other Outsider backed out.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film's budget allowed $600 for Matt Dillon to learn to play craps in real games. To make sure the money lasted, a film crew member always bet against him for the same amount so their wins and losses cancelled out.
    • Goofs
      Although the film is set in 1957, when J.C. Cullen (Matt Dillon) and Aggie Donaldson (Suzy Amis) get off the street car, there is a 1980s model Cadillac in the street behind them, followed by another late-model car.
    • Quotes

      George Cole: Cullen, you're gonna pay for this!

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Princess Bride/China Girl/The Big Town/The Pick-Up Artist/I've Heard the Mermaids Sing (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      Home of the Blues
      Written by Johnny Cash, Glen Douglas and Lillie McAlpin

      Performed by Johnny Cash

      Courtesy of Sun Records Int.

      By arrangement with Original Sound Entertainment

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Big Town?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 25, 1987 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Arm
    • Filming locations
      • Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Albacore Productions Inc.
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,733,017
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $776,675
      • Sep 27, 1987
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,733,017
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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