The Poker Club 2008

A group of friends deal with death on poker night.

The Poker Club - DVD (2008) for $6.98 from OLDIES.com Drama - Order by Phone 1-800-336-4627. COVID-19: Because of processes designed to ensure the safety of our employees, you may experience a delay in the shipping of your order. Thank you for your patience and understanding. The Poker Club (2008) 'The hand you're dealt could be murder.' R 1 hr 22 min Oct 16th, 2008 Horror. The Poker Club intruchipeaza povestea a 4 tineri care organizau in fiecare luni seara o intalnire la un joc de poker si mai multe pahare de alcool. Nimic neobisnuit si aparent normal pentru americanii anilor 2007-2008. Filmul are o actiune rapida, inca de la prima intalnire care ne este aratata de catre regizor, cei 4 surprind un hot in casa lor si fara prea multa vorbarie il ucid pe acesta.

RATING:

The Poker Club (2008)dvd Johnathon Schaech Johnny Messner Loren Dean 795. The lowest-priced item in unused and unworn condition with absolutely no signs of wear. The item may be missing the original packaging (such as the original box or bag or tags) or in the original packaging but not sealed. Four friends are swept up in a treacherous game of intrigue and betrayal during a Monday night poker game gone terribly awry. Every Monday night, Aaron Tyler (Johnathon Schaech) and his friends.

PLOT

A poker-themed horror/thriller in which a group of friends meet for their weekly poker game and discover that there is an intruder in the house. After accidentally killing him their lives are never the same and they start mysteriously dying off one by one.

SKILLS

This movie avoids the complete ’72’ rating because at times I actually found myself intrigued by the story. And it does deserve a bit of credit for being the only film in the genre of ‘poker horror’, but overall I can’t recommend this film in any serious way. The best thing I can say is that the acting, dialogue and screenplay are soild, bordering on mediocre.

LEAKS

Let’s not kid ourselves, this is a terrible movie. The story doesn’t make a lot of sense ( I still don’t fully understand the ending, and not in a good way) and the acting is just a step above comedically-awful. Don’t waste your time, there are better poker movies out there, and there are certainly better thrillers out there.

POKER AUTHENTICITY

Not relevant.

There’s basically no poker in this movie, save for a brief opening scene.

Watching poker is great, but wouldn’t you rather be playing? Play free poker.

Psssst! We’re on social media. See, what we do there.
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Photo Source: http://horrornews.net/35955/film-review-the-poker-club-2009/

The Poker Club was one of several clubs at the heart of the Scottish Enlightenment where many associated with that movement met and exchanged views in a convivial atmosphere.[1]:110 The Poker Club was created in 1762[1]:109 out of the ashes of The Select Society. Adam Smith said, 'Divided counsels and diminished zeal supply, no doubt, the main reason for the decay of the Poker Club,' but he also mentioned the rising costs to members.[2]

The Poker was the name given to the Militia Club at its third or fourth meeting. The Militia was formed in Edinburgh to promote the cause of establishing a militia in Scotland. It was thought[who?] that the formation of a democratic national force was essential to grace the dignity of the nation and the aim was to make up for the omission of that provision in the Militia Act of 1757 which applied only to England and the Scottish Militia Bill which was rejected in April 1760.[3][4] The aim of the club provoked some unwelcome opposition and, at the suggestion of Adam Smith the name was changed so as to be enigmatic to the general public.[citation needed] Much as a fireplace poker stirs a fire to flame up, The Poker was to 'stir up' the militia question.

The club was said by Dr Carlyle to consist of all the literati of Edinburgh and its surroundings.[citation needed] The establishment was frugal and moderate, 'as that for all clubs for a public purpose should be. The dinner was set soon after two o'clock, at one shilling a head, the wine to be confined to sherry and claret, and the reckoning to be called at six o’clock'.

The first fifteen members were chosen by nomination, the rest by ballot, 'two black balls to exclude the candidate'. A new 'preses' (chairman) was chosen at each meeting. There were three office bearers: the Secretary, Sir William Pulteney, the Assassin, Andrew Crosbie and the Assassin’s Assessor, David Hume 'without whose assent nothing could be done, so that between 'plus' and 'minus' there was likely to be no bloodshed'.[citation needed]

The minute book of 1776 names forty three members,[citation needed] including Joseph Black, 'Jupiter' Carlyle, Sir John Clerk of Eldin, Henry Dundas, Adam Ferguson, Lord Elibank, Sir John Dalrymple, John Hume, David Hume, William Robertson, John Robison, George Dempster, and Adam Smith.

David Hume could well find the company of The Poker a relief from a skeptical depression – 'Most fortunately it happens that since reason is incapable of dispelling these clouds, nature herself suffices to that purpose ... I dine, I play a game of backgammon, I converse, and am merry with my friends; and when after three or four hours amusement, I return to these speculations, they appear so cold, and strain'd, and ridiculous, that I cannot find it in my heart to enter into them any farther.'[5]

See also[edit]

Club

References[edit]

The Poker Club 2008 Girls

  1. ^ abCarr, Rosalind (November 2008). 'The Gentleman and the Soldier: Patriotic Masculinities in Eighteenth Century Scotland'. Journal of Scottish Historical Studies. Edinburgh University Press. 28 (2): 102–121. doi:10.3366/E1748538X0800023X.
  2. ^John Rae (2006). Life of Adam Smith. p. 139. ISBN9781602060418.
  3. ^Namier, Lewis; Brooke, John (1985). The House of Commons 1754-1790. Haynes Publishing. p. 551. ISBN9780436304200.
  4. ^Sher, Richard (1989). 'Adam Ferguson, Adam Smith and the problem of National Defense'. The Journal of Modern History. University of Chicago Press. 61 (2): 243–244. doi:10.1086/468234. JSTOR1880860.
  5. ^Nicholas T. Phillipson (2012). David Hume: The Philosopher as Historian. Yale U.P. p. 32. ISBN978-0300184860.

The Poker Club 2008 Boys

  • Burton, J.H., ed. (1861). The Autobiography of the Rev. Dr. Alexander Carlyle of Inveresk. Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood., p. 312. quoted in –
  • Daiches D., Jones P., Jones J. (eds ) The Scottish Enlightenment: 1730 - 1790 A Hotbed of Genius The University of Edinburgh, 1986.

The Poker Club 2008 Film

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