Color of Money Shot Recreated

briankenobi

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member

Hello all. I promise I will not share every weekly video here. Since it is the 40th anniversary of The Color of Money, and this is the first installment of my "Cinema Recreations" series, I figured I would share it here.

I have the next two movie recreation shots picked out (December is a shot from the Hustler and January from Poolhall Junkies). If anyone here wants to suggest a shot from a pool movie or TV show, let me know. Before anyone asks, yes I will be doing the Miller Lite Beer commercial. I have something special planned for that so once everything lines up, I will shoot that.

Have a good day everyone!
 
Pool needs a GOOD movie based on current times/norms. The last two pool booms in the US were both the result of a Hollywood flik and its way past time for another one.
I agree, but it's gonna be hard to make an entertaining movie to non-pool players with how PG pool is now days.

Pool has done A LOT to get away from the gambling, hustling, drinking, and drugs image it once was so tightly bonded to. All those things were quite certainly what drew a lot of people to it that didn't know how to play.

You can't have a pool movie about what pool is actually like today, because it'd just be Joe Schmoe going from state tournament to state tournament, and for the pro side of things, it doesn't look much different. Nobody is going from seedy bar and pool room to pool room, sleeping in their cars, winning big and losing their ass in one night, fighting 5 dudes to make it to their car alive. That doesn't happen anymore, and we've already got movies about that.

The hustling and dirty pool like back in the old days is gone, and nobody really wants it to come back. The current pool scene is boring for non-players. We sit in bars waiting for our 30mins to play our match, then go home. The pros do the same, just not in bars. The true money players stream their matches, so there's no more tall tales and stories that lead to good material for a whole movie.

So where does this leave us? Well, I personally love history, and the history of pool and it's players is virtually untapped on a grand-scale. Lot of grassroots videos and whatnot, but nothing cinematic about the people or the sport itself. Everything has been fiction. So I think a good selling, enthralling non-fictional video like biography of someone like Buddy Hall, Keith McCready, Siegel, Efren, from beginning to end, when they were a kid, til now, would just be fantastic. Take their little known facts, talents, skills, put it in a movie from childhood til now, some fictional additions and cinematic magic of course, but keep it pretty inline with their true stories. This way they can take liberty with creativity on how certain events happened, that are just stories.

Just spitballin.
 
Hello all. I promise I will not share every weekly video here. Since it is the 40th anniversary of The Color of Money, and this is the first installment of my "Cinema Recreations" series, I figured I would share it here.
Knew you were gonna pick this one. Such a pretty shot, cinematography-wise and pool-wise. Not overly difficult, but has such a cool factor to it.
 
I agree, but it's gonna be hard to make an entertaining movie to non-pool players with how PG pool is now days.

Pool has done A LOT to get away from the gambling, hustling, drinking, and drugs image it once was so tightly bonded to. All those things were quite certainly what drew a lot of people to it that didn't know how to play.

You can't have a pool movie about what pool is actually like today, because it'd just be Joe Schmoe going from state tournament to state tournament, and for the pro side of things, it doesn't look much different. Nobody is going from seedy bar and pool room to pool room, sleeping in their cars, winning big and losing their ass in one night, fighting 5 dudes to make it to their car alive. That doesn't happen anymore, and we've already got movies about that.

The hustling and dirty pool like back in the old days is gone, and nobody really wants it to come back. The current pool scene is boring for non-players. We sit in bars waiting for our 30mins to play our match, then go home. The pros do the same, just not in bars. The true money players stream their matches, so there's no more tall tales and stories that lead to good material for a whole movie.

So where does this leave us? Well, I personally love history, and the history of pool and it's players is virtually untapped on a grand-scale. Lot of grassroots videos and whatnot, but nothing cinematic about the people or the sport itself. Everything has been fiction. So I think a good selling, enthralling non-fictional video like biography of someone like Buddy Hall, Keith McCready, Siegel, Efren, from beginning to end, when they were a kid, til now, would just be fantastic. Take their little known facts, talents, skills, put it in a movie from childhood til now, some fictional additions and cinematic magic of course, but keep it pretty inline with their true stories. This way they can take liberty with creativity on how certain events happened, that are just stories.

Just spitballin.
Mentioned it before, but I think Freddy the Beard thought a biopic on Jack and Barbara Cooney would be the nuts. I agree. It would have to be done well. But it could look great on film and introduce people to one pocket. The way Cooney went about setting up games would take the interest broader than pool/ one pocket as well as Barbara’s role.
 
I agree, but it's gonna be hard to make an entertaining movie to non-pool players with how PG pool is now days.

Pool has done A LOT to get away from the gambling, hustling, drinking, and drugs image it once was so tightly bonded to. All those things were quite certainly what drew a lot of people to it that didn't know how to play.

You can't have a pool movie about what pool is actually like today, because it'd just be Joe Schmoe going from state tournament to state tournament, and for the pro side of things, it doesn't look much different. Nobody is going from seedy bar and pool room to pool room, sleeping in their cars, winning big and losing their ass in one night, fighting 5 dudes to make it to their car alive. That doesn't happen anymore, and we've already got movies about that.

The hustling and dirty pool like back in the old days is gone, and nobody really wants it to come back. The current pool scene is boring for non-players. We sit in bars waiting for our 30mins to play our match, then go home. The pros do the same, just not in bars. The true money players stream their matches, so there's no more tall tales and stories that lead to good material for a whole movie.

So where does this leave us? Well, I personally love history, and the history of pool and it's players is virtually untapped on a grand-scale. Lot of grassroots videos and whatnot, but nothing cinematic about the people or the sport itself. Everything has been fiction. So I think a good selling, enthralling non-fictional video like biography of someone like Buddy Hall, Keith McCready, Siegel, Efren, from beginning to end, when they were a kid, til now, would just be fantastic. Take their little known facts, talents, skills, put it in a movie from childhood til now, some fictional additions and cinematic magic of course, but keep it pretty inline with their true stories. This way they can take liberty with creativity on how certain events happened, that are just stories.

Just spitballin.
I agree 100%.

Pool is too sterile now to make an entertaining movie.

They would make something like the Karate Kid except changing the story line to pool.

That story was worn out long ago.
 
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I still think a movie made from McGoorty would be great. It's roughly 100 years after the main part of his story -- the Great Depression, rebellion, and sex, with billiards thrown in to tie everything together.
 
There is a table tennis movie coming out starring Timothy Chalamet that from the trailer looks to have some pingpong gambling action.

The Queen's Gambit series (based on book written by Walter Tevis, the Color of money novel author) also featured gambling when playing chess.

If they make another pool movie (which rumor is they are) I would gamble with anyone that it features gambling in it.
 
There is a table tennis movie coming out starring Timothy Chalamet that from the trailer looks to have some pingpong gambling action.

The Queen's Gambit series (based on book written by Walter Tevis, the Color of money novel author) also featured gambling when playing chess.

If they make another pool movie (which rumor is they are) I would gamble with anyone that it features gambling in it.
It's going to have to, or it'd be so boring not even pool players would watch.

The problem is, there's already movies about pool and gambling, hell that's all the movies out about pool. So to just make another movie about pool gambling would be lame. This is why I think a life-story of the sport itself or one of the greats of the sport would hit the spot, because it'd still be about the dark dirty halls and bars and gambling, but it won't be the same story we've seen before.
 
Well done.
I made this shot in a barbox tourney 25 years ago but the balls were wired cross-side.
My opponent was dumbfounded so I figured he had never watched the movie.

IIRC Forrest Whitaker's character made a pretty cool shot in this flick too.
I'll have to re-watch it because I think I watched that shot a bunch trying to see everything that was happening in that one.
My memory isn't the greatest so perhaps it wasn't so attention-worthy.
 
Well done.
I made this shot in a barbox tourney 25 years ago but the balls were wired cross-side.
My opponent was dumbfounded so I figured he had never watched the movie.

IIRC Forrest Whitaker's character made a pretty cool shot in this flick too.
I'll have to re-watch it because I think I watched that shot a bunch trying to see everything that was happening in that one.
My memory isn't the greatest so perhaps it wasn't so attention-worthy.
Forrest Whitakers character did a couple cool 9 ball shots. Let me know which one you want me to do and I will add that to the list.
 
It's going to have to, or it'd be so boring not even pool players would watch.

The problem is, there's already movies about pool and gambling, hell that's all the movies out about pool. So to just make another movie about pool gambling would be lame. This is why I think a life-story of the sport itself or one of the greats of the sport would hit the spot, because it'd still be about the dark dirty halls and bars and gambling, but it won't be the same story we've seen before.
None of the others besides Color of Money or Hustler were anywhere near as mainstream as either of them. I mean, yoiu can make comparison's to other sports movies like Baseball, Football, whatever and they have all been done before as well. Doesn't mean they were done good or someone could do it better.

Id love to see a pool movie that has award winning actors giving award nominating performances.
 
None of the others besides Color of Money or Hustler were anywhere near as mainstream as either of them. I mean, yoiu can make comparison's to other sports movies like Baseball, Football, whatever and they have all been done before as well. Doesn't mean they were done good or someone could do it better.

Id love to see a pool movie that has award winning actors giving award nominating performances.
Having a major name is what would draw attention.
 
Having a major name is what would draw attention.
Yes. That and a decent director.

Shooting Gallery had a few decent celebs in it. None were A-listers anymore, but they were at one point.

Walken wasnt in Poolhall Junkies enough to save it. Mars was decent though.

I enjoyed both of those even though they dont hold a candle to Color of Money.

When it comes to directors and cinematography, if they pulled Scott Frank from The Queen's Gambit to direct and tried to duplicate the look and feel of that series... that would be ideal. Hell, it could be a remake of The color of Money, just base it on the book this time, which from my understanding, is a lot different then the movie.
 
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