Mike Sigel
Grady Mathews
Howard Vickery
Steve Mizerak
Keith McCready :grin-square:
Mark Jarvis
Jimmy Mataya
Waterdog
Louis Roberts
Who else? I know I am missing a few names.![]()
Don't forget Iggy Pop!

Mike Sigel
Grady Mathews
Howard Vickery
Steve Mizerak
Keith McCready :grin-square:
Mark Jarvis
Jimmy Mataya
Waterdog
Louis Roberts
Who else? I know I am missing a few names.![]()
I would have liked to see Gleason make a small appearance. "Hi Eddie" is all he would need to say, in that way he did it in the Hustler, to really drive that nail home. Eddie would not even need to respond- just a bit of long eye contact...
Vince: "Who was that Eddie?"
"Never mind".
Easy stuff, but I think that detail would really make it a proper sequel...
Wow, it's strange for me to read so much hatred for The Color of Money.
I was a teenager when it came out, and that movie basically created a whole new generation of pool players.
Sure, the pool scenes were kind of cheesy, but it's not nearly the terrible movie it's being made out to be here on this forum. It's very entertaining, and it's not really about pool.
If you want to see a movie about pool, it would have to be a documentary. TCOM is a drama, about a young man coming of age and an old man accepting his role in the big scheme of things.
I agree with everyone on one point though, The Hustler is the better movie. Of course, The Hustler is better than most movies. It's not really about pool either, there isn't much pool playing in it at all.
Cruise was very young in TCOM, and Newman was picking up a character he played decades before. It's a good movie for what it is, and not all movies age as well as The Hustler.
The Color of Money did more to jump start the pool scene in the 80s and 90s than any other event. All the guys that whine and b1tch about wanting pool to be "how it used to be"...you know...HALF THIS BOARD! They should pray that another big budget cr@ppy movie comes out about pool every 5 years. A movie that tells all the mediocre B level players they can BE somebody. All the C level players they can get rich quick and not work for it. Those are the suckers that drove the economy of pool for almost 20 years. We are lucky to have the svckfest known as TCOM. It supported many a pool room/ road player/ billiard company over the past few decades. Enough of the complaining already.
The Color of Money did more to jump start the pool scene in the 80s and 90s than any other event. All the guys that whine and b1tch about wanting pool to be "how it used to be"...you know...HALF THIS BOARD! They should pray that another big budget cr@ppy movie comes out about pool every 5 years. A movie that tells all the mediocre B level players they can BE somebody. All the C level players they can get rich quick and not work for it. Those are the suckers that drove the economy of pool for almost 20 years. We are lucky to have the svckfest known as TCOM. It supported many a pool room/ road player/ billiard company over the past few decades. Enough of the complaining already.
I think we all would have loved seeing that...especially Jackie Gleason. Alas, he passed away before COM was filmed...:sorry:
TCOM was released in 1986.
Gleason passed away in 1987 and was alive and well during the production of the movie.
For some reason, his part in the book was written out of the movie.
TCOM was released in 1986.
Gleason passed away in 1987 and was alive and well during the production of the movie.
For some reason, his part in the book was written out of the movie.
Ok, The Hustler has more enduring value than the Color of Money. In The Hustler, pool is the backdrop through which Fast Eddie must confront every element of his morals, ethics, values, and conscience, and the vehicle through which he experiences life's highest highs and lowest lows. To succeed at pool will require great sacrifices of Fast Eddie, and the rigor with which he tackles the question of whether such sacrifices are ultimately worth it give The Hustler an extraordinarily rich fabric that The Color of Money cannot nearly match.
Nonetheless, The Color of Money is a much better pool movie. Some suggest that the implausibility of the Vincent character (a total unknown that plays world class pool) ruins The Color of Money, but I beg to differ. Using a very contrived character as a vehicle to offer a panoramic view of an aspect of his society was not beneath the dignity of Charles Dickens and in no way detracted from the quality of the pictures of society that Dickens painted through the written word. I believe that The Color of Money's use of the admittedly improbable Vincent is similarly effective.
In The Color of Money, through the eyes of Vincent, we get to see:
small time barbox betting
bigtime barbox betting
players good enough to make it on the road
players not good enough to make it on the road
the hustling scene and its underlying morality
trashtalking and gamesmanship
dumping and its implications
mentor/student tension
the pre-tournament scene
the tournament scene
the tournament side action scene
and much, much more.
Is it likely that a booze chugging driving range pro that rarely competed could rebound to the point of being in contention to win on the seventy second hole of the US Open golf tournament in his first try? Not really, but the very contrived Roy MacEvoy, played by Kevin Costner in "Tin Cup" still provided a wonderful panoramic view of the tournament golf scene.
To those that dismiss The Color of Money just because Vincent is an example of artistic license, I ask you to reconsider.
To sum, I guess my view on things is that The Hustler is the better movie, but The Color of Money is the better pool movie.