Gambling At Rick's Casablanca

Play it once, Sam. For old times' sake. When Ilsa first arrives, before Rick knows she's there, she. The film takes place in Casablanca, with most of the action happening at a tavern called Rick's, named for the hero of the story, played by Humphrey Bogart. The plot begins when an old flame, Ilsa Lund (portrayed by Ingrid Bergman), suddenly appears with her husband, Victor Laslow, who's wanted by the Nazis.

BALDWIN: Casablanca has reel value

Published 10:15 am Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Greetings, my fellow patriotic cinephiles of Winchester!

I hope all you had a happy, safe and COVID-free Thanksgiving.

Ah yes, the time for Black Friday and Cyber Monday have come and gone.

Gambling at rick

Casablanca Gambling Scene

This time of year has been adopted as the official kickoff to the Christmas season in the past 50 years per the advertising giants and marketing gurus of retail.

Black Friday is always promised to be the perfect solution to all our problems by incurring debt with the haphazard purchasing of stuff we don’t need.

Mass consumerism is always the prescribed medicine to swallow by our doctors of retail to fix the ills of our economy, which will heal all other ailments of our sickness within society.

Pandemics, social injustice, high unemployment and even terrorism can not be fixed by buying a large screen TV on “sale.”

Gambling At Rick's Casablanca Restaurant

This ploy of misdirection with shiny “stuff” works on most of our population as they fall prey to the quick-fix scheme of consumerism that temporarily gratifies the buyer as it continues to control and divide the masses.

The analysis on the division of country, man and self are not examined better than in today’s title of discussion, the classic, award winning “Casablanca” (1942).

“Casablanca”is the romance drama starring Humphrey “The Maltese Falcon” Bogart as Rick Blaine, an American expat who owns a popular nightclub and shady casino, Rick’s Café Américain, in Casablanca, Morocco.

Rick is a troubled man who has fallen far from his once honorable patriotic pedestal of ideals based on integrity and serving the good of others over self.

Rick is now unadmirable and half the man he used to be but is well known and popular amongst the upper-class foreign expats and refugees who now call Casablanca home.

Rick’s club is somewhat a hub of international relations during World War II, with the tensions of war and Rick’s inner turmoil increasing when his old lover Ilsa, portrayed by Ingrid “Notorious” Bergman, travels to Casablanca on the run from the Germans with her famed husband and resistance rebel, Laszlo, played by Paul “Deception” Henreid.

Rick

“Casablanca” was directed by filmmaker Michael “White Christmas” Curtiz with a screenplay by brothers Julius and Philip “Arsenic and Old Lace” Epstein and Harold “Mission to Mars” Koch adapted from the unproduced play, “Everybody Comes to Rick’s.”

Curtiz and the Epstein brothers would continue to have a successful career in the industry, but Koch would be brought under investigation by the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) for his outspoken political views resulting in him being blacklisted from work by Hollywood in 1951 as a communist.

“Casablanca” is cited year after year as one of if not the greatest American film ever to be made and is always in stiff competition with rivals, “Citizen Kane” (1941) and “Vertigo” (1958). “Casablanca” is more than just a romance flick with an exotic backdrop during WWII before the U.S. was attacked in Pearl Harbor.

Rick is the embodiment of the U.S. and its once favored position of isolationism before its involvement of WWII.

Rick’s character is torn, once an idealist now a cynic by the time the viewer joins him for a drink at the bar.

Rick’s moral dilemma is that of the U.S. watching the atrocities of war and being conflicted by playing it safe by being neutral on the sidelines. Japan ultimately made that decision for us.

With the world falling apart, Rick’s perception that his life is already over, he emerges to show us that we must pick ourselves up to save our society as it is our collective responsibility. Doing the right thing is never easy, but it is always right.

Sacrifice, integrity and caring for your neighbor will make this world a better place; not a Black Friday sale on a TV.

Rick

Real value is born out of what you can give, not what you receive.

Here’s looking at you kid. Have a film-tastic day!

Gambling

Rick Baldwin is a writer, filmmaker and film/music historian. He is president of the Winchester-Clark County Film Society. Find more from Rick on Facebook. He is on Twitter @rickbaldwin79 and can be reached by email at rickbaldwiniii@hotmail.com.

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Captain Renault was “shocked, shocked” to discover there was gambling at Rick’s Cafe in foggy Casablanca. (Watch Renault pocket his take.) Last week Congress was “shocked, shocked” to learn the estimated cost of universal health insurance was $1.6 trillion over a decade. (Policy wonks yawned.)
Then there was the mind-numbing $12 trillion Tab to Taxpayers after the casinos on Wall Street broke the banks. Call it shell shock.
Speaking of casinos. It seems to me actuarial health insurance can be compared to casino. This is because the odds always favour the house.
In the free market: Some people are healthy so they don’t buy insurance. Some are self-insured. Some are insured until they lose their jobs. Some are partly insured. Some are insured until their insurer deems them too sick to be insured. Some are too poor so Medicaid picks up the tab. Some are too old so Medicare picks up the tab. Some consider insurance premiums chump change. Some are happy with the insurance they’ve got. Some go bankrupt for medical reasons.
But the odds always favour the house. Everyone at some point needs medical care. Everyone at some point will get sick and die. So the casinos pay out enough claims to keep the players coming back.

Over at Economix Uwe Reinhardtwrites:

Captain Renault was “shocked, shocked” to discover there was gambling at Rick’s Cafe in foggy Casablanca. (Watch Renault pocket his take.) Last week Congress was “shocked, shocked” to learn the estimated cost of universal health insurance was $1.6 trillion over a decade. (Policy wonks yawned.)

Then there’s the mind-numbing $12 trillion Tab to Taxpayers after the Wall Street casinos broke the banks. Call that shell shock.

Speaking of casinos. Private health insurance can be compared to casino. This is because the odds always favour the house.

In the free market: Some people are healthy so they don’t buy insurance. Some are self-insured. Some are insured until they lose their job. Some are partially-insured due to pre-existing conditions. Some are insured until their insurer deems them too sick to be insured. Some are too poor so Medicaid picks up the tab. Some are too old so Medicare picks up the tab. Some are happy with their insurance. Some consider the cost of health insurance chump change. Some go bankrupt.

Everyone is trying to game the system. But the odds always favour the house. It always looks easy at the movies. (Check out Dance in Hall of Angels.) But everyone at some point needs medical care. Everyone at some point will get sick and die. So the health insurance casinos pay out enough claims to keep the players coming back. Mind numbing.

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June 2009