The Gambler 2014 Ost Download
I’m looking for the OST for the 2014 “The Gambler” with Mark Wahlberg. Thanks for the help!
Twisted insane songs free download 2017. Review by Mark Dujsik December 24, 2014 There are much quicker and far less convoluted ways to commit suicide than the method chosen by the protagonist of The Gambler, and they don't involve incurring massive debt to three gangsters, juggling the degree of animosity from each of those criminals, throwing away a portion of the family fortune on reckless gambling escapades, or a rigged college basketball game. Some would see a plan this complex as a cry for help, but Jim Bennett (Mark Wahlberg) wastes all of the aid extended to him.
The only thing that matters to him is whether or not a decision will somehow further his goal of self-destruction. He'll take a loan from a gangster as a means to pay back one of the others. When he invariably loses that money by letting the bets ride, he'll take yet another loan from proprietor of the illegal gambling establishment—the one he was supposed to pay off in the first place. He'll take money from his mother (Jessica Lange), especially when she says that it's the last time—a payment to be finished with him. That bag of cash funds a trip to Las Vegas.
At first, Jim seems to be a gambling addict. He cannot stop, and the loans appear to be a way to feed his habit.
It's self-destructive behavior, but if it's an addiction, it's unintentionally self-destructive—a side effect of a psychological state over which he has no control. Later in the film, though, he's unflinchingly honest about his actions, which only makes them more enigmatic. He wants a clean start, free of any and all connections to his current life and the expectations that come with it. He reveals that he, on at least two occasions that he or someone else recalls, has won a million dollars or two at the tables. That's a certain kind of money, one of the gangsters says. That's the kind of money that entitles a person to respond to anyone or anything with two freeing words (The second is 'you,' so take a stab at the other). It's the kind of money that can buy a person a clean start, but it's not clean enough for Jim.
One character says he's an all-or-nothing kind of guy, and he is. He knows he can't have it all.
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There's a limit to how much money he can win from the dealers and the croupiers or borrow from the gangsters. He was once a writer, but upon realizing that he was only producing mediocrity, he quit and became a literature professor at a local college (Wahlberg sells the defeated aspect of the character but not the intelligence, which he attempts to portray by rapidly reciting lectures). The overwhelming majority of his students either won't become great writers or simply don't care about the craft, so what's the point to that? If Jim can't have it all, he may as well go for nothing. With nothing—no job that he hates, no family fortune, no financial obligations—he can, from a certain perspective, have it all.