The Cooler
  • Book Store Admin
  • DVD's
  • Comments Off on The Cooler

The Cooler is a 2003 American romantic drama film directed by Wayne Kramer, from a screenplay by Frank Hannah and Kramer. The film stars William H. Macy, Maria Bello, Shawn Hatosy, Ron Livingston, Estella Warren, Paul Sorvino, and Alec Baldwin. It follows a casino cooler whose mere presence at the gambling tables usually results in a streak of bad luck for the other players.

The Cooler had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2003, and was released in limited theaters in the United States by Lions Gate Films on November 26, 2003. Baldwin and Bello were nominated for Golden Globe Awards and Screen Actors Guild Awards for their supporting performances, with Baldwin receiving his first Academy Award nomination.

Plot

Unlucky Bernie Lootz (William H. Macy) works at the Shangri-La casino as a cooler – a man with near professionally bad luck, his presence at a casino designed to stop people from winning. A cocktail waitress, Natalie (Maria Bello), takes no real notice of Bernie, who is smitten with her. The casino manager and partner, Shelly (Alec Baldwin) prides himself on running a classically Las Vegas casino, and resents the new places that attract a lower clientele. The owners, however, hire an advisor named Larry (Ron Livingston) to help bring in more money with techniques contrary to Shelly s outdated policies. Bernie informs Shelly that he is leaving town in a week.

After an encounter during which Bernie rescues Natalie from an aggressive customer, she appears to take an interest in him. Secretly prodded by casino owner Shelly, Natalie asks Bernie out for a drink. They end up sleeping together, and then Natalie takes a genuine interest in Bernie. They begin seeing each other, but Bernie is apprehensive due to his mostly bad luck. Shelly initially thought a relationship with Natalie would keep Bernie from leaving his casino. Bernie reveals to Natalie that he used to be a gambling addict, and was in huge debt to several casinos. Shelly saved him by breaking his kneecap and paying off his debts in exchange for Bernie s work as a cooler for six years, which ends at the end of the week. By accident, Bernie and Natalie run into his estranged son Mikey and his pregnant wife Charlotte who are scamming a diner by faking labor. Bernie tells Mikey to stop by the casino sometime.

Bernie is happy with his new relationship and his cooling abilities fade, much to Shelly s anger. Mikey and Charlotte come by the motel and Bernie gives them $3,000, but Natalie is skeptical of Charlotte s behavior. When Bernie reveals to Natalie he intends to leave Vegas, she initially says she won t go with him, and Bernie is upset. When Bernie fails to cool Mikey at the craps table, Shelly realizes he is being cheated by Mikey. Shelly takes Mikey and Charlotte downstairs and his crew begins beating Mikey. Bernie then promises to pay the $150,000 Mikey was up, but Shelly breaks Mikey s hand and punches Charlotte, revealing her pregnancy was being faked anyway. Though distraught, that night Natalie and Bernie confess their love for one another, and Bernie again becomes a good luck charm.

Shelly calls Natalie to his office and reminds her that he hired her to date Bernie so he wouldn t leave Vegas, not to fall in love with him, which has made him both happy and lucky. He forces her to leave town abruptly, which hurts Bernie and ruins his luck. She does truly love Bernie, though, and returns, restoring Bernie s luck. Shelly goes to Bernie s motel room and begins packing for Natalie and hits her, cutting her face. After a tense exchange wherein she claims Bernie is the closest thing Shelly has to a friend and he doesn t want him to leave, he simply leaves her there. When Bernie comes home, she reveals Shelly hired her to pretend to like him, but she truly fell in love with him.

Banking on his good luck brought on by Natalie s devotion, Bernie confronts Shelly and calls him a coward with nothing in his life but the casino. Shelly lets him go on the condition he pay back the $150,000, which Bernie tries to win at craps. Larry wants Shelly to stop Bernie’s hot streak, but Shelly takes him into the men’s room and beats him, breaking his hand.

Bernie leaves and he and Natalie drive away from Las Vegas. He pulls over and reveals that he won a lot of money, but a cop presumably sent by Shelly approaches and readies to kill them. Shelly gets in his car and finds his partner waiting for him. On Larry s behalf, he whacks Shelly, saying they have to protect their interests. A drunk driver accidentally hits and kills the cop and Bernie remarks their luck must have turned. They drive off finally free.

Cast

  • William H. Macy as Bernard Bernie Lootz
  • Alec Baldwin as Sheldon Shelly Kaplow
  • Maria Bello as Natalie Belisario
  • Shawn Hatosy as Mikey Lootz
  • Ron Livingston as Larry Sokolov
  • Paul Sorvino as Buddy Stafford
  • Estella Warren as Charlotte
  • Arthur J. Nascarella as Nicky Fingers Bonnatto
  • Joey Fatone as Johnny Cappella
  • Ellen Greene as Doris
  • M. C. Gainey as Highway Patrol Officer
  • Michelle Lopez as The Red Headed Craps Player cooled by Bernie
  • Timothy Landfield as The Player

Production

The film premiere was at the Sundance Film Festival. The Cooler was shown at the Cannes Film Festival, the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival, and the Deauville Film Festival, among others, before going into limited release in the United States. During that limited release, The Cooler was primarily shown in Reno, Nevada. The Cooler was mainly filmed in Reno at the Golden Phoenix Reno. The Golden Phoenix Hotel Casino is now a completed condominium project called The Montage.

In an episode of the Sundance Channel series Anatomy of a Scene, director Wayne Kramer and members of his cast and crew discussed various aspects of The Cooler. In order to show Bernie s evolution from loser to winner, costume designer Kristin M. Burke dressed him in suits and clothes that progressively became better fits. Early in the film, the character resembles a boy dressed in his father s oversized clothing. By the end, Bernie is not only wearing the right size suit, but he has accessorized it with a brightly colored shirt and tie that represent his sunnier disposition. Lighting schemes designed by cinematographer Jim Whitaker also contributed to documenting Bernie s progression. In early scenes, his face is kept in the shadows, but later he is filmed in a spotlight and backlit to make him stand out from everything behind him.

The Golden Phoenix Reno, which was already scheduled for a total condominium refurbishment, was used as the interior of the Shangri-La. The Golden Phoenix was finally closed for building rehab in 2006, and since 2006 there has been a complete conversion to condominiums, which are named The Montage. Golden Phoenix Reno casino employees and Reno locals were used extensively in the filming of The Cooler. The hotel buildings demolished during the closing credits are the Aladdin, the Sands, the Landmark, and the Dunes hotels.

The song Almost Like Being in Love , used to mark Bernie s transition from mournful sad sack to winner, was written by Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner for the stage musical Brigadoon.

According to the 2006 documentary film This Film Is Not Yet Rated, the MPAA originally rated the film NC-17 because of a glimpse of Maria Bello s pubic hair during a sex scene. An edited version rated R was released in theaters. A director s cut has been broadcast by the Independent Film Channel and Cinemax.

The Cooler, budgeted at under $4 million, grossed $8,291,572 in the United States and $2,173,216 in foreign markets for a total worldwide box office of $10,464,788.The Cooler earned about $40 million more with DVD and online sales.

Critical reception

The film received generally positive reviews from critics, with considerable praise for Alec Baldwin s performance. Writing for The New York Times, A. O. Scott said, The setting … is a little tired, and the premise is pretty hokey. Mr. Kramer, rather than trying to discover anything new, is content to recycle familiar characters and story lines. The script … and the direction are skillful, if occasionally gimmicky … Luckily this picture is rescued from cliché by the quality of the acting, and Mr. Kramer wisely gives the actors room to work.

On Rotten Tomatoes the film a has an approval rating of 77% based on 174 reviews, with an average rating of 6.8/10. The site s critics consensus reads: A small movie elevated by superb performances. On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 69 out of 100 based on 36 critics, indicating generally favorable reviews .

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said the film has a strange way of being broad and twisted at the same time, so that while we surf the surface of the story, unexpected developments are stirring beneath … This is a movie without gimmicks, hooks or flashy slickness … The acting is on the money, the writing has substance, the direction knows when to evoke film noir and when … to get fancy.

In Rolling Stone, Peter Travers rated the film 3½ out of a possible four stars and added, Wayne Kramer, who co-wrote the scrappy script with Frank Hannah, makes a potent directing debut and strikes gold with the cast… Top of the line is Baldwin, whose revelatory portrayal of an old Vegas hard-liner in thrall to the town s faded allure is the stuff Oscars are made of. From James Whitaker s seductive camerawork to Mark Isham s lush score, The Cooler places all the smart bets and hits the jackpot.

Mark Holcomb of The Village Voice said, Taking a page from the Sin City cinema revisionist s handbook, The Cooler mimics the Vegas insider s perspective of Casino (without Scorsese s fetishistic attention to detail), the seedy/saccharine insouciance of FX s Lucky (devoid of quirky chutzpah), and the couch-potato glitz of NBC s Las Vegas … What s left never gels as fantasy, drama, or romantic comedy… film never amounts to more than a cute idea stretched to poker-chip thinness.

Awards and nominations

  • National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor (Alec Baldwin, winner)
  • Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture (Maria Bello, winner)
  • Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor (Baldwin, winner)
  • Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actor (Baldwin, winner)
  • Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor (Baldwin, nominee)
  • Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture (Baldwin, nominee)
  • Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture (Bello, nominee)
  • Satellite Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama (William H. Macy, nominee)
  • Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture (Baldwin, nominee)
  • Satellite Award for Best Original Screenplay (Frank Hannah and Wayne Kramer, nominees)
  • Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role – Motion Picture (Baldwin, nominee)
  • Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role – Motion Picture (Bello, nominee)

Year 2003
ReleaseDate 2004-01-16
RuntimeMins 101
RuntimeStr 1h 41min
Plot In an old school Las Vegas casino, its top gambling jinx breaks his curse when he falls in love, much to his boss’ consternation.
Awards Nominated for 1 Oscar, 9 wins & 26 nominations total
Directors Wayne Kramer
Writers Frank Hannah, Wayne Kramer
Stars William H. Macy, Maria Bello, Alec Baldwin
Produced by Andrew Busey,Alessandro Camon,Bryan Furst,Sean Furst,Robert Gryphon,Joe Madden,Chris Miller,Brett Morrison,Michael A. Pierce,Edward R. Pressman,Elliot Lewis Rosenblatt,John Schmidt
Music by Mark Isham
Cinematography by James Whitaker
Film Editing by Arthur Coburn
Casting By Sig De Miguel,Cathy Sandrich Gelfond,Amanda Mackey,Wendy Weidman
Production Design by Toby Corbett
Set Decoration by Alice Baker
Costume Design by Kristin M. Burke
Makeup Department Heather Cummings,Daniel Curet,Andy Harmon,Jason Rail,Carol Strong
Production Management Shauna Miller,Tony Murphy,Diana Tauder
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Richard L. Fox,Heather Grierson,Casey Mako
Art Department Michael Clements,E.C. Duffy,Kahele Dunn,Will Durham,Erin Fite,Terry Hargis,Wayne Kramer,Jamie Maheu,Bryan Matulay,David Richards,Steven J. Vana,Travis Zariwny,Lynn Malmberg,John C. Martin II
Sound Department Tom Burns,Steve Copley,Stephen Halbert,Scott Hecker,Jairo Hernandez,Javier M. Hernández,Tateum Kohut,Howard London,Anna Malkin,Eric A. Norris,Brad North,John Sievert,Jon Taylor,David Weisberg,Byron Wilson
Visual Effects by Michael Adkisson,Jose Avitia,Blake Busby,Derry Frost,Julie Landholt,David Fred Masselink,Kevin McVey,Andrew Midgley,Gary Miller,Michael Morreale,Merysa Nichols,Vincent Nuñez,Jeremy Oddo,Phillip Palousek,Dave Piedra,Adam Stern
Stunts Robin Lynn Bonaccorsi,Casey Easlick,Dan Lemieux,Noon Orsatti,Robin Lynn Bonaccorsi
Camera and Electrical Department Douglas Arnold,David Blundell,Josh Caine,Jeff Caples,Andy Coe,Lauren Glen,Dylan Goss,Richard Hendricks,Colin Hudson,Kevin Hutchins,Reed Koppen,Shawn Lacy,Adam Neace,Gaylen Nebeker,Loren Nebeker,Robert Novellino,Guy Pfiershy,Patrick Reddish,Chris Reiter,Jim Sheldon,Jonathan Sizemore,Robert Stone,Craig Sullivan,Todd Taylor,Nicole Hirsch Whitaker,Sarah Wheat Whittaker,Quinn Yancey,Robert SummerStone
Costume and Wardrobe Department Anita Louise Brown,Molly Grundman,Heidi Higginbotham
Editorial Department David Bilow,Stephen R. Sheridan,Derek Vaughn,Jonathan Miller
Location Management Tim Wilson
Music Department Pepper Adams,Thomas A. Carlson,Sandy DeCrescent,Peter Erskine,Billy Gottlieb,Mark Isham,Jettared,Stephen Krause,Jason La Rocca,John Leftwich,Flo Mo-Tee,Sid Page,Adam Peppers,Rich Ruttenberg,Bob Sheppard,Florian Tessloff,Tracy McKnight,Alysia Oakley,Florian Tessloff
Script and Continuity Department Suzanne Bingham,Rebecca Poulos
Transportation Department Brent Baccambuso,John Bowen,Scott Doleto,James R. Guillory,David Lee,Larry Lynch,Ronald Owens,David Perelle,Lloyd Stinson,Richard Webb
Additional Crew Nick Agorastos,Wendy Altman-Cohen,Kirk Baily,Kathleen Becker,Greg Bosler,Linda Cook,Ryan Cooke,Wendy Cutler,Philip Eichner,Jeff Fuller,Mike A. Gayten,Jackie Gonneau,Hayley Green,Lauren Grey,Malcolm Groome,Matthew Hill,Alexander Kukulus,Ivy K. Lukas,John Bard Manulis,Henry Marx,Micah May,Jim McCarthy,Mike Miner,Randall Montgomery,Adam Seth Nelson,Tina Panella-Hart,Udo Pfeiffer,Shauna Phelan,Kristina Santoro,Dean Scofield,Richard Sloane,Robin Adair Sparks,Rick S. Sulier,John A. Suzio,Jayce Templeton,Jeff Turner,Georgia Vestakis,Douglas Walls,Cathy Yermilov-Miller,Lulu Zezza,Greg Bernstein,Jamie Carmichael,Frank Hannah,Brendan MacDevette,Tom Schaus,Harry White
Thanks Harry Abrams,Levy Antal,Greg Bernstein,Richard Branca,Jim Carter,Jim Cashman,Larry Collins,Leanne Coronel,Portia Dawson,Warren Dewey,Timothy Dougall,Jerome Duboz,Craig Furst,Howard Furst,Suzanne Furst,Janine Giaime,Kenny Goodman,Larry Goodman,Heather Griffith,Shailly Guleri,Tim Guleri,Kevin Hearst,Bob Hoffman,Jon Huddle,Chris Jenkins,Leah Antonio Ketcham,Lori Killam,Ethan Kramer,Jodi Kramer,Mary Loughan,Rob Loughan,John Lynch,Kelly Lynch,Kira Makagon,Randy Paul,Nick Pollack,Shaun Redick,Michael Roban,Richard Roll,Rena Ronson,Jim Roudebush,Cindy Ryder,Chris Schmidt,Karen Sebok,Ann Setty-Rosevear,Marcello Sozio,Peter Sternlicht,Anthony Teneriello,Bret Tyler,Steve Van Anda,Ally Visram,Amin Visram,Mark Williams,Beverly Wood,Tracy Zahoryin
Genres Drama, Romance
Companies ContentFilm, Pierce/Williams Entertainment, Furst Films
Countries USA
Languages English
ContentRating R
ImDbRating 6.9
ImDbRatingVotes 34292
MetacriticRating 69
Keywords casino,card playing,waitress,money,cocktail waitress