Here are my top picks for the best poker scenes. There were tons of more, I didn't get to put some valid candidates because the video would turn out too long.
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Movie Names:
1. Casino Royale
2. Rounders
3. Casino Royale
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AceBond the second which movie was, please respond me!!
Iancu Hombre it’s called rounders
Ethan Deleon thx
Türkçe
@@yakunji4613 pllllllllllllllllllllll
In the movie: They put on a flush, 2 full houses, a straight flush. In real life: Omg this guy has two pairs.
trueee. "Holy shit, three of a kind, no way."
Hhhhhhhhhh nice one
Matt Damon calls his two pair a monster hand after all :)
Jesus all in, i'm folding
i lost quads to straight flush once
3:50 Dealer: straight flush Hellmuth: Gotta be fuckin' kidding me, straight flush on the turn over 2 full houses and a flush. Great work, your granny teach you to deal like that?
😂😂😂
So sick!
He called a raise with 57…. Idiot from Northern Eu I mean the United Kingdom!
Obviously he has no clue how to deal moving the board cards around. 😂
😂😂
1 Flush, 2 Full Houses and 1 Straight Flush in just one round. Unreal.
I've seen two boats and quads before. It's possible. (Flopped set over set over set, middle set quadded up on the river.)
Its everyday on Pokerstars.
Ethan Solomon its a james bond movie none of its realistic
@@slaymyface1357 obviously. My point is just that crazy things do sometimes happen in poker, haha.
@@esol927 ik i once got three straights in back to back to back hands on the poker app but then went on the shittiest cold streak and lost it all to the blinds
When I first saw this scene I didn't understand what the hell was going on. But now I look back and say. Damn these guy got a lucky ass hand
What's this scene
Casino Royale’s poker scene is too unrealistic even for a movie
It sold the general audience. It's just wrong in the eyes of anyone who knows poker
True that
I don't really play poker so what's so wrong about it?
@@mihneacireasa4613 a flush is a decent hand, appears in like 1 out of 10 hands (played rounds) . A full house is even higher and more special, let's say 1 out of 20. Then a straight flush is 1 out of 500. The highest hand in poker, after the Royal flush(almost none). The chance to have them all combined in 1 round, is like 0.00001 %, and with a pot of millions absolute zero
and it's dumb james isn't the best players he was just the luckiest everybody played like they should
Would have been better if bond goes all in and the other guy folds. He shows a 3 high. Lmao i woulda been dead.
kzhead.info/sun/mb2vZbdlg5isgZs/bejne.html Open my poker b roll video
that hand is literally impossible
@@aJanism but there's 5 cards on the board, it's impossible
Unrealistic, the guy had a good hand, it has too much equity for him to fold it, he would have to be the best in order to fold that. Also, 3 high is impossible, the lowest high there can be is 5 high. But in this case the highest high is Ace high is it was on the board.
The trouble with the Bond scene is the average movie goer doesn’t understand the game well enough for the movie to depict a realistic poker hand, and there is no voiceover narrator (like in “Rounders”) to explain things. So they have to make it so splashy that even a complete noob can follow it.
Bond took his money, his car and his women all in one hand !
thats the comment what ı look for :DD
What the title of movie bro?
@@teddypratama4757 casino royale its a james bond movie
not just that- he also bed her! That got her killed.
Damn, she was FINE AS FUCK. 😍
That last hand of Rounders where Mike beat KGB was really well played. Mike flops the nuts and he keeps betting into him. it's what every poker player dreams of when you flop the nuts and it holds through out.
It wasnt well played. Because if kgb really thought mike was on a draw, then it wouldnt have made sense that he went all in.
@@Ilchino1 I think KGB was still on tilt after Mike laid down the Ace 5
This happened to me with the 2nd nuts. A4o, flop, A44.
@@Ilchino1 In general I agree, but he might have thought Mike paired an ace on the river and therefore wanted to overbet a weaker pair he had in order to try to push Mike out of the pot. Without knowing what Teddy had, its hard to say for sure it was a bad play.
@@Norm-R teddy literally says “the ace couldn’t have helped you”
"In my club, I will splash the pot whenever the *PHAAK* I please." - Teddy KGB, "Rounders", 1998.
Malkovich’s ridiculous performance is legendary entertainment. 5-6 lines quoted constantly almost 30 years later. What a pro.
“And the Valet Ticket”. The nail in the coffin Lmao
I didn’t understand everything but I still watch this
It's all royal or straight flush
Me too😂😂
I felt that too - in fact, it was movies like these that got me started into learning how to play that variant of Poker (Texas Hold Em) - and compare between other variants like “5 Card Draw” or “7 Card Stud”.
.
That russian needs to understand that everything he does at the poker table conveys information.
Jovan P yo I just saw that ad 😂
Alright Daniel!
He cant be eating a sandwich all willie nilly
Woohoo, детка! я люблю это!
You can’t be all loosey goosey eating an oreo
The amazing part about the bond scene is the dealer made sure to announce Bond had the high hand and was on the board for the $300 half hour high hind bonus.
But also incorrectly called "heads up" and a whole host of other irregularities including those damn board layouts at the end, urgh.
No Bad Beat Jackpot???
@@RolandStone32Aces over sixes doesn't qualify for bad beats anywhere, hell I've taken a worse beat this week
@@edmundfredmund I thought he had quads...I posted before watching the full scene
James Bond one was very predictable once they showed the enemy’s A6. Better plot twist would have been if he had off suit 7 and 5, lost, then busted his pistol and started capping everyone.
Original comment...
Still an excellent scene
loooooooooooooooooooooooool
I expected James Bond to have A 8 for a better full house
Or maybe reveal that once they saw he lost his original amount, they thought it was very risky and replaced the dealer with a card mechanic of their own with a disguise.
Rounders is underrated imo, it shows the darker side of poker (with a good ending nonetheless). What happens both at the beginning and end is realistic. Mike wins with poker tells and a bit of luck, Bond wins with an angel on his shoulder and the fact that it's a Bond movie... will say that Rounders is made better by Damon and Malkovich... accent aside the latter is a good villain and shows the overconfidence you can get if you think you cornered someone in a headsup.
Lol why is the accent so bad? It’s distracting.
Rounders is underrated? You mean by the general public, right? Not by the Poker community.
Underrated ? It’s the most popular poker movie of all time
Rounders is overrated The Cincinatti kid is underrated
"Rounders" is definitely a good movie about poker.
Favorite quote of all time “pay the man his money”🔥🔥🔥🔥
"Pyay thyat myan hyis myoney"
Favorite quote of all time and you dont get it right. That is some crazy shit.
You got me, where was that quote from?
@@wayneurquhart7192Rounders. Great actors. Great story. Absolutely horrible Russian accent
Mian
The best part about this is how the video ends…Bond about to go all-in where it really counts 😂
“Oh and the vallet too?” Talk abt a kick in the teeth😂
He said vallet ticket.
Bond = The King of Slowrolls
Very rude- stupid scene too. It should be in one of the worst poker hands across the board.
Actually, 007 made shorter pause than Le Chiffre did.
The guy eating cookies is such a great actor
Latoya Marie His name is John Malkovich. Aside from his fake Russian accent, I agree, he did very well :)
Mr. San of a bee ch 😂😂
Maximilian Mouse Lit's play some caardss!
@@bossinater43 his accent is actually more real than you think
Marcel Overlorx I just think it's not integrated in the character is all. He palatalizes everything, which most Russian speakers speaking English wouldn't do.
The best poker hand is “Four jacks, you owe me 10 grand, pal“ from the Sting.
$15 grand. Pal.
You won't b able to get a game of jacks!@@289cobra9
James Bond shows 'luck' Jason Bourne shows 'intelligence'
He was lucky, still played it right. The check with a straight flush was the only way to get some money from a player with a spade
Martin dario Mikeb dimi bob davidw Christophe Chris 8 atm,
Meanwhile John Wick is waiting with his Pencil 🤣🤣😋😋
this wasn't Jason Bourne you plank
And neither are The Cincinnati Kid
Nice content, Love it. played. Thank you for your content. Please upload more!
The music is so fly in rounders i love the dark note when mike reveals his cards
ANY greatest poker scenes compilation MUST have Steve McQueeen in the Cincinatti Kid.
The Hustler with cards. . Final hand was ridiculous. Most big screen poker hands are.
Couple of the scenes mentioned below. The Big Hand for a Little Lady plot where they borrow money from the bank on the hand was used in a thirty-minute black and white Gunsmoke years before. The Aces Full versus Straight Flush from The Cincinatti Kid was the same two hands from The Gambler with Kenny Rogers.
Bond took his car, his money, and his girl. JAMES BOND IS A SAVAGE! Lolll
holy shoot you are so right!
His life too
Would’ve been better if le chiffre had quad aces since it’s already freakin unreal
hahah true 😂😂
Don't forget the scene in the movie Shade where Sylvester Stallone says during a poker game "I always knew this day would come." He turns over the winning hand that wins him $300k and says "That day is not today." Sylvester was the dean and they said to become the dean you have to beat the dean. No one beated him. Classic movie!
Great movie no one ever talks about
Although it was a fixed hand :) I loved the movie ,the acting was terrible lol . The scene with the organ thieves was a tough watch lol
Amazing video and amazing channel and amazing job friend 😀😎👍❤
These 2 movies had led me to poker; therefore, I became a poker player and loved this game !
KGB at least played it straight after getting beat. He may be a ruthless, cold blooded son of a gun, but at least he had honor in the head-to-head game...tells you Teddy may have played a hand or two with his life on the line...kind of respected Mike for having the balls to deal back in.
califinn well he have to. Nobody will go to his place if whenever a player bust his ass went sleeping with the fishes after the card game. That’ll lead to a bad reputation for his den. But you know what, that’s the only realistic poker deck so far. James bond poker scene is just way to bananas in my opinion.
Matt Damon is horrible. A child can tell he’s slow rolling
Think it also comes down to the fact that if word gets out that he doesn't pay out when he loses at his club, then no one will play at his club anymore.
@@deflatedrabbit5232Precisely
The card room is Teddy KGB's business. Word would get around that he stiffed Mike, had he done so. If you know that you will be cheated, why play there?
El golpe o "the Sting" es la mejor que vi, estás son muy previsibles, tal vez la de Maverick merecía estar
The Final game in Maverick with Mel Gibson will always be my favorite!
Super underrated flick!
I was expecting that to be the final clip!
The scene from Rounders is so much more authentic than the Bond clips. They dont belong in the same reel.
bond: get the game, get the car, get the parking ticket, and get the girl away from just one upset boy
The Sting between Newman and Shaw.
At 0:44 is that the system loard bolie acter from stargate sg1 the tv series??
A couple suggestions for next time.... "A Big Hand For The Little Lady," "The Cincinnati Kid," "The Sting."
Sir Sean Connery (25 August 1930 - 31 October 2020) was a Scottish actor. He was the first actor to portray fictional British secret agent James Bond on film, starring in seven Bond films between 1962 and 1983. Connery originated the role in Dr. No (1962) and continued starring as Bond in the Eon Productions films From Russia with Love (1963), Goldfinger (1964), Thunderball (1965), You Only Live Twice (1967) and Diamonds Are Forever (1971). Connery made his final appearance in the franchise in Never Say Never Again (1983), a non-Eon-produced Bond film. He is also known for his notable collaborations with directors such as Alfred Hitchcock, Sidney Lumet and John Huston. Their films in which Connery appeared included Marnie (1964), The Hill (1965), The Offence (1973), Murder on the Orient Express (1974) and The Man Who Would Be King (1975). He also acted in Robin and Marian (1976), A Bridge Too Far (1977), Time Bandits (1981), Highlander (1986), The Name of the Rose (1986), The Untouchables (1987), Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), The Hunt for Red October (1990), Dragonheart (1996), The Rock (1996) and Finding Forrester (2000). His final on-screen role was as Allan Quatermain in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003). Connery received numerous accolades including a BAFTA Award, three Golden Globe Awards and an Academy Award, the first Scottish actor to win the lattermost achievement. He also received honorary awards such as the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 1987, the BAFTA Fellowship in 1998 and the Kennedy Center Honors in 1999. He was made a Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters in France and a knight by Queen Elizabeth II for his services to drama in 2000. Early life and education Sean Connery plaque near the site of his birth in Fountainbridge, Edinburgh Connery's birth certificate Thomas Sean Connery was born at the Royal Maternity Hospital in Edinburgh, Scotland, on 25 August 1930; he was named after his paternal grandfather.[6][7] He was brought up at No. 176 Fountainbridge, a block which has since been demolished.[8] His mother, Euphemia McBain "Effie" McLean, was a cleaning woman. The daughter of Neil McLean and Helen Forbes Ross, she was named after her father's mother, Euphemia McBain, wife of John McLean and daughter of William McBain from Ceres in Fife.[9][10][11] Connery's father, Joseph Connery, was a factory worker and lorry driver.[12] Two of his paternal great-grandparents emigrated to Scotland from Wexford, Ireland, in the mid-19th century,[13] with his great-grandfather James Connery being an Irish Traveller.[14] The remainder of his family was of Scottish descent, and his maternal great-grandparents were native Scottish Gaelic speakers from Fife and Uig on Skye.[15][16] His father was a Roman Catholic, and his mother was a Protestant. Connery had a younger brother Neil and was generally referred to in his youth as "Tommy".[17] Although he was small in primary school, he grew rapidly around the age of 12, reaching his full adult height of 6 ft 2 in (188 cm) at 18. Connery was known during his teen years as "Big Tam", and he said that he lost his virginity to an adult woman in an ATS uniform at the age of 14.[19][20] He had an Irish childhood friend named Séamus; when the two were together, those who knew them both called Connery by his middle name Sean, emphasising the alliteration of the two names. Since then Connery preferred to use his middle name. Connery's first job was as a milkman in Edinburgh with St. Cuthbert's Co-operative Society. In 2009, Connery recalled a conversation in a taxi: When I took a taxi during a recent Edinburgh Film Festival, the driver was amazed that I could put a name to every street we passed. "How come?" he asked. "As a boy I used to deliver milk round here", I said. "So what do you do now?" That was rather harder to answer. In 1946, at the age of 16, Connery joined the Royal Navy, during which time he acquired two tattoos. Connery's official website says "unlike many tattoos, his were not frivolous - his tattoos reflect two of his lifelong commitments: his family and Scotland. ... One tattoo is a tribute to his parents and reads 'Mum and Dad', and the other is self-explanatory, 'Scotland Forever'". He trained in Portsmouth at the naval gunnery school and in an anti-aircraft crew. He was later assigned as an Able Seaman on HMS Formidable. Connery was discharged from the navy at the age of 19 on medical grounds because of a duodenal ulcer, a condition that affected most of the males in previous generations of his family. Afterwards, he returned to the co-op and worked as a lorry driver, a lifeguard at Portobello swimming baths, a labourer, an artist's model for the Edinburgh College of Art, and after a suggestion by former Mr. Scotland Archie Brennan, as a coffin polisher, among other jobs. The modelling earned him 15 shillings an hour. Artist Richard Demarco, at the time a student who painted several early pictures of Connery, described him as "very straight, slightly shy, too, too beautiful for words, a virtual Adonis". Connery began bodybuilding at the age of 18, and from 1951 trained heavily with Ellington, a former gym instructor in the British Army.[28] While his official website states he was third in the 1950 Mr. Universe contest, most sources place him in the 1953 competition, either third in the Junior class or failing to place in the Tall Man classification. Connery said he was soon deterred from bodybuilding when he found that Americans frequently beat him in competitions because of sheer muscle size and, unlike Connery, refused to participate in athletic activity which could make them lose muscle mass. Connery was a keen footballer, having played for Bonnyrigg Rose in his younger days. He was offered a trial with East Fife. While on tour with South Pacific, Connery played in a football match against a local team that Matt Busby, manager of Manchester United, happened to be scouting.[33] According to reports, Busby was impressed with his physical prowess and offered Connery a contract worth £25 a week (equivalent to £882 in 2023) immediately after the game. Connery said he was tempted to accept, but he recalls, "I realised that a top-class footballer could be over the hill by the age of 30, and I was already 23. I decided to become an actor and it turned out to be one of my more intelligent moves".
All three scenes are legendary ✊🏾
Maybe you missed seeing the final hand in the "Cincinnati Kid" with Steve McQueen and Edward G, Robinson. The best.
RIDICULOUS.
Slow rolling the stone nuts in a $100,000,000 pot is easily the most badass thing James Bond has done
A way to get stabbed in the back off the street lmao
If you think slow rolling is badass god help whichever poor bastard sits at your table
I think the more badass thing is the pony tail guy confidently showing his king high flush in face of call to his river shove, raise to his shove, 3bet to the raise to his shove and call to the 3bet in a paired board like there was a universe where his flush was gonna scoop the pot.
not even a slow roll
@@Nosirt he just wanted to be included!
good evening sir and welcome back 😂
I love Big Hand For A Little Lady. Its a grea old western based around an annual cash game.
In Casino Royale it would probably be more likely that James Bond would walk out of the casino and get struck by lightning TWICE than for there to be a flush, 2 full houses and a straight flush in one hand.
to be entirely honest, it would be more probable someone had uno cards at that table whilst someone was trying to go fish than that hand ever happening EVER, but especially at a high stakes table like that.
i will say that that rounders final poker scene is still one of the best ever "psy him, pay that man he's money" :) :) :)
Daniel Wroughton Craig CMG (born 2 March 1968) is an English actor. He gained international fame by playing the fictional secret agent James Bond for five installments in the film series, from Casino Royale (2006) up to No Time to Die (2021). After training at the National Youth Theatre in London and graduating from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in 1991, Craig began his career on stage. He began acting with the drama The Power of One (1992), and had his breakthrough role in the drama serial Our Friends in the North (1996). He gained prominence for his supporting roles in films such as Elizabeth (1998), Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001), Road to Perdition (2002), Layer Cake (2004), and Munich (2005). In 2006, Craig played Bond in Casino Royale, a reboot of the Bond franchise which was favourably received by critics and earned Craig a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. His non-Bond appearances since then include roles in the fantasy film The Golden Compass (2007), the drama Defiance (2008), the science fiction Western Cowboys & Aliens (2011), the mystery thriller The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011), and the heist film Logan Lucky (2017). For his performance as Detective Benoit Blanc in the comedy mystery films Knives Out (2019) and Glass Onion (2022), he received two Golden Globe Award nominations. On stage, Craig starred in the Royal National Theatre's production of Angels in America (1993) on the West End. He made his Broadway debut in the play A Steady Rain (2009) and returned to Broadway in the revivals of Harold Pinter's Betrayal (2011) and William Shakespeare's Macbeth (2022). He starred as Iago in the New York Theatre Workshop production of Othello (2016). Early life and education Daniel Wroughton Craig was born on 2 March 1968 in Chester, Cheshire, as the son of an art teacher, Carol Olivia (née Williams), and Timothy John Wroughton Craig, a midshipman in the Merchant Navy and steel erector. His father later became the landlord of two Cheshire pubs: the Ring o' Bells in Frodsham and the Boot Inn in Tarporley.[4] Craig has an older sister named Lea (born 1965),[5] and a much younger half-brother named Harry (1991).[6] He is of part Welsh and distant French descent, counting the French Huguenot minister Daniel Chamier and Sir William Burnaby, 1st Baronet among his ancestors. His middle name, Wroughton, comes from his great-great-grandmother, Grace Matilda Wroughton.[7] When Craig's parents divorced in 1972, he and his sister moved to the Wirral Peninsula with their mother, where he attended primary school in Hoylake as well as school in Frodsham. He attended Hilbre High School in West Kirby. Upon leaving there at the age of 16, he attended Calday Grange Grammar School as a sixth form student.[8] He played rugby union for Hoylake RFC.[9][5] Craig began acting in school plays at the age of six, making his debut in the Frodsham Primary School production of Oliver! He became interested in serious acting by attending Liverpool's Everyman Theatre with his mother. At the age of 14 in 1982, he played roles in Romeo and Juliet and Cinderella at Hilbre High School. In 1984, he was accepted into the National Youth Theatre and moved to London, where he worked part-time in restaurants to finance his education. His parents watched his stage debut as Agamemnon in Troilus And Cressida. He performed with the National Youth Theatre on tours to Valencia and Moscow under the leadership of director Edward Wilson. He entered the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in 1988, and graduated in 1991 after a three-year course under the tutelage of Colin McCormack, an actor from the Royal Shakespeare Company.
What about the poke scene in " the sting " ?
Casino royals: an espionage movie Rounders: a film about poker
Love the dealer in the 3RD clip!
You forgot The Sting with Newman and Redford
Including the Casino Royal car scene is a terrific touch.
Love watching these not knowing wtf is going on
12:50 - It's easy to let an opponent string bet (and then add more money to the pot) when you have the nuts.
I love how rounders included someone being titled splashing the pot like a 5 year old. Reminds me of all my home games
Rounders is the GOAT poker movie.
THE BEST BOND EVER
In the bond scene, he basically had the nuts for that board...He didn't even need to think about it.
He does that so the guy with A 6 thinks he is unsure , Bond knows he has the nuts ,but he needs to make him think he doesn't
@@chalgaforever4915 yes I got that. I only meant that bond knew he had won from the start.
but poker is it
@@chalgaforever4915 idk if ace 6 is ever folding there even with 100 bigger stacks jamming behind
Outstanding!
Vincent Kartheiser ("scarface" in that first Bond clip) was also in poker scenes in the movie In Time
I actually did a rough calculation for the casino royal poker scene. The odds of that happening is 1 in around 150 million. 😂😂😂😂
And imagine it happened exactly the moment they were shooting the movie. They were so lucky to get that footage.
I saw a game online where guy lost with 4 aces to a royal flush, what are those odds? kzhead.inforodE_jWw-qc
You calculated that EXACT hand silly
"This guy called a raise with 5-7 suited, probably won't last another half hour. This guy can't even spell poker." - Phil Hellmuth
James Bond never loses when he gambles.
Sir Roger George Moore KBE (14 October 1927 - 23 May 2017) was an English actor. He was the third actor to portray fictional secret agent James Bond in the Eon Productions/MGM Studios film series, playing the character in seven feature films between 1973 and 1985. Moore's seven appearances as Bond, from Live and Let Die to A View to a Kill, are the most of any actor in the Eon-produced entries. On television, Moore played the lead role of Simon Templar, the title character in the British mystery thriller series The Saint (1962-1969). He also had roles in American series, including Beau Maverick on the Western Maverick (1960-1961), in which he replaced James Garner as the lead, and a co-lead, with Tony Curtis, in the action-comedy The Persuaders! (1971-1972). Continuing to act on screen in the decades after his retirement from the Bond franchise, Moore's final appearance was in a pilot for a new Saint series that became a 2017 television film. Moore was appointed a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador in 1991 and was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2003 for services to charity. In 2007, he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to the film industry. He was made a Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French government in 2008. Early life Roger George Moore was born on 14 October 1927 in Stockwell, London. He was the only child of George Alfred Moore (1904-1997), a policeman based in Bow Street, London, and Lillian "Lily" Pope (1904-1986). His mother was born in Calcutta, India, to an English family. He attended Battersea Grammar School, but was evacuated to Holsworthy in Devon during the Second World War, and attended Launceston College in Cornwall. He was further educated at Dr Challoner's Grammar School in Amersham, Buckinghamshire. Moore was apprenticed to an animation studio, but he was fired after he made a mistake with some animation cels. When his father investigated a robbery at the home of film director Brian Desmond Hurst, Moore was introduced to the director and hired as an extra for the 1945 film Caesar and Cleopatra. While there, Moore attracted an off-camera female fan following, and Hurst decided to pay Moore's fees at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Moore spent three terms at RADA, where he was a classmate of his future Bond co-star Lois Maxwell, the original Miss Moneypenny. During his time there, he developed the Mid-Atlantic accent and relaxed demeanour that became his screen persona. At 18, shortly after the end of the Second World War, Moore was conscripted for national service. On 21 September 1946, he was commissioned into the Royal Army Service Corps as a second lieutenant.[9] He was an officer in the Combined Services Entertainment section, eventually becoming a captain[8] commanding a small depot in West Germany, where he looked after entertainers for the armed forces passing through Hamburg.[10]
Oh and the Valet Ticket 😜😜😜.. Savage...
If you didn't include The Cincinnati Kid in this best of, then you missed the mark. The final scene with Edward G Robinson and Steve McQueen eclipses both Bond films.
I was thinking just that as I started the video.
Listen to this learned man, he knows of what he speaks.
Just about anything is better than that last hand in Casino Royale.
That’s the reason I started watching this. Figured it would the last “classic” scene. Was reviewing the video and reading comments and ran into this string. The old man really gutted McQueen. You could really feel it because you wanted the “good guy” to win. Well, at least he had an afternoon a tumble with Ann Margaret.
@@alexkorzenewski4250 yeah. Back in the day I would prob risk losing some money for that action with Ann
In casino royale final hand, the side bets are showing first and the aggressor is showing last. I've played poker for quite some time and have never seen 2 full houses let alone 2 full houses, flush and a straight flush, le chiffre obviously had more chips than bond. Why the hell did he walk away
Two full houses is not that far fetched, I have seen more than once. If you have two doubles on the table, there is a good chance of two full houses. Of course the odds for that to happen absolutely are slim, may be one in 1000.
@@vamsikgp 2 full houses with 4 community cards is rare but ive never seen two separate full houses
If you like poker movies I recommend "The Cincinnati Kid" and A Big Hand for the Little Lady". They're both from the early 1960's but they're both classics.
The dead man's hand scene in Ballad of Buster Scruggs is my favorite.
The poker scene in Friends Season 1 Episode 18 beats all of this scenes
You forgot the scene from in time, where timberlake gamble with his life
Much more in line with Bonds style would be him getting a good read and making a hero call on his enemy's bluff with A high or a small pair. Or check raising his opponent off of a slightly better hand. But he's just a donk that keeps getting hit with the deck
Rounders final poker scene is great.
Bond always seems to get the chair right side of the dealer.
“Well of course you won with *those* cards. Even Steve coulda won with those cards, and all he can say is “Hey-O!!”
Hey ooooo
@@ytw101 “*SHUT THE FUCK UP, STEVE!!!!!!!* And people say I’m annoying.”
U know whats funny. I discovered that game no less then a week ago and i kept laughing at the conversation in it.XD so what great timing
Casino Royale was a good movie but Rounders, that was just game-changing. It's a timeless classic.
Awesome Cult Classic Scenes
can someone tell me what those plastic things are called in casino royale the things that represent higher denominations
id like to know too
It's called plaques, and usually found in high stakes poker
They're plaques, and they are more commonly used in games outside of the United States, regardless of the stakes. I've played in games in London casinos where plaques were used in denominations as small as £50.
What is the second clip
Rounders
Still didn't understand the game but watching the videos .what a funny
How this did not include the Cincinnati Kid is almost criminal that movie started the whole genre
He beat me straight up! Pay that man his money! You gotta respect that
What the name of that movie
@@heavymind3269Rounders
How is the amazing poker scenes with Paul Newman and Robert Shaw from "The Sting" not on here?
It's not in here because everyone except you and I are too young to know that it's one of the greatest movie scenes, poker or not, of all time.
I'm with you guys. The fake drunk. The shit talking. The mispronounced last name. The switch on the switch!!!
@@KoRnBaL19What was I going to do? Call him for cheating better than me in front of the others?"
@@andydaniel2When you come to game like this you bring your money (flashing Shaw's own cash pickpocketed by Redford off Shaw before the game). Wait until I spread it around town that you welched. You won't be able to get a game of Jacks!!
@@georgestevens1502 Wow! Half a century and while I completely remember the line I didn't realize that he was flashing Shaw's money. :)
Cool handed drama depicted well in these scenes.
you should have added the final hand in The Cincinnati Kid, classic
11:54 damn thats cold
What did he say before 2 hours late
@@borarider669 if that (hug and kiss) was for luck you are 2 hours late
@@siddharthverma4017 thanks mate
@@borarider669 lol i'm 2 years late with the reply no need to thank me🤣🤣
@@siddharthverma4017 😀
And « The Kid » with Steve McQueen ? « Maverick » ?
I love all those forbidden string best^^
PEY THET MAN HIS MOANEY
Bond is the luckiest player in the universe
bond movie poker scenes are always worth watching
WHEN I saw the first hand being played, I knew exactly what was going to happen before it did. Last hand ridiculous, a 2-4 player could see that coming.
what could teddy possibly have had to fire on all three streets on that board? like at least show the pocket aces
I think it was implied. Especially the river giving him the set.
pyay that myan his monay
"Check Check Check, he trep mee" hahahahahhahahahhaha
The sting poker scene
Casino Royale all-time favorite . But Matt Damon was good too .