Not only did they put lit cigarettes on the rail , they would have a cig hanging out of their mouth while shooting for 5 minutes and when the ash eventually fell off onto the cloth , you either had to clean it up or play around it.
Rick, as a regular 'pool room bum' (and a regular smoker) my recall of the 40's, to the 70's, are very vivid !..Even when Brunswick started putting ashtrays on their Crown's, almost all us smoker's still used the rail out of habit.. Rarely, if ever, did any pool room have carpet, and the concrete or wooden floor, was where you flicked your ashes, or ground out your cigarette..hence, no need real need for ashtray's..:embarrassed2:
Very few (if any) room owners would ever make an issue out of it, unless you were so careless, you burned the felt on the rail !..I know you non-smoker's, and younger guy's cannot imagine this, but thats the way it was, before health scares, and no-smoking laws became the norm.
Almost EVERYBODY smoked...Even the judge would light up in a crowded courtroom, why not, everyone else was smoking ! (watch an old movie) Going into a smoked filled bar, or pool room, was no different than the same air in your house !..Even non-smokers tolerated smoking in their house, because 90% of their friends would be smokers...Not saying it was right, but thats just the way it was !![]()
Not only did they put lit cigarettes on the rail , they would have a cig hanging out of their mouth while shooting for 5 minutes and when the ash eventually fell off onto the cloth , you either had to clean it up or play around it.
Rick, as a regular 'pool room bum' (and a regular smoker) my recall of the 40's, to the 70's, are very vivid !..Even when Brunswick started putting ashtrays on their Crown's, almost all us smoker's still used the rail out of habit.. Rarely, if ever, did any pool room have carpet, and the concrete or wooden floor, was where you flicked your ashes, or ground out your cigarette..hence, no real need for ashtray's..:embarrassed2:
Very few (if any) room owners would ever make an issue out of it, unless you were so careless, you burned the felt on the rail !..I know you non-smoker's, and younger guy's cannot imagine this, but thats the way it was, before health scares, and no-smoking laws became the norm. :sorry:
Almost EVERYBODY smoked...Even the judge would light up in a crowded courtroom, why not, everyone else was smoking ! (watch an old movie) Going into a smoked filled bar, or pool room, was no different than the same air in your house !..Even non-smokers tolerated smoking in their house, because 90% of their friends would be smokers...Not saying it was right, but thats just the way it was !![]()
The first time I walked into a a real pool hall was Julians in Manhattan, and practically all the tables had burn marks on the rails. I'm curious why Brunswick never offered anything other than formica covered rails.
The pool in the Hustler was technically ridiculous throughout the entire movie. Fats at one point in the first match banks a ball cross side with the table open.Watched "The Hustler" late last night for the umpteenth time.
Besides lack of any cue ball control by Newman and the silly shots that did not fit in a high power money match (must have been frustrating for Willie), I noticed a couple things that I don't remember noticing before.
When Eddie was playing 3-cushion it looked like the table was a worn-out 8-footer.
"Fats" laid his cigarette on the rail while shooting! I know pretty much everybody (but me) smoked back then, but I would think both guys would have had more respect for a table that was clearly reserved for big money games.
I've always said the movie was the epitome of great acting, but mediocre when it came to the pool details.
-----------------------------------------------------------I've always admired Newman, but his game wasn't a lot better than Cruise's, from what I saw. And I have my doubts about how "great" Gleason was. I heard that the pros back then said good things about his game so he'd continue losing money to them. Makes sense...he had a lot of dough to lose.
I played one of the guys in that pool room where Eddie got his thumbs broken. It was Charlie Dierkop, and he could play a little. He played in the original version, but it was cut before release. He was the guy by the door with the broken nose. Nice fella...I believe he was also one of the Butch Cassidy gang in that flick.
Newman chalked the same way in TCOMI think chalk drilling is usually associated with beginners or bangers, right? Any chance Newman's character did this as a result of hustling and trying to pass himself off as a banger?
They never do, they don't even care. They make movies that are based on a real events we all know the facts about and they will just make up stuff because it makes a better story.So this thread got me to thinking. I'd be curious if anyone on here has ever seen a movie that "gets it right" related to anything that they have in-depth experience with.
But, we have people on here from all kinds of different backgrounds and professions. So if anybody has a movie that they think pretty accurately represents their job or something they're very familiar with, I'd be interested in knowing what it is so I can watch it.
Movies are made to entertain the non-expert, it usually takes some artistic license to do that.
So this thread got me to thinking. I'd be curious if anyone on here has ever seen a movie that "gets it right" related to anything that they have in-depth experience with.
But, we have people on here from all kinds of different backgrounds and professions. So if anybody has a movie that they think pretty accurately represents their job or something they're very familiar with, I'd be interested in knowing what it is so I can watch it.
Movies are made to entertain the non-expert, it usually takes some artistic license to do that.