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The Greatest Fictional Casinos From the World of Movies

From the Tangiers to The Red Dragon

Over the years, several real-life casinos have appeared in fictitious films, such as Caesar’s Palace in The Hangover.

However, many well-known films are set in entirely fictional casinos. We discussed those with Exycasinos team and the guys shared their opinion what are the most noteworthy fictional casinos. The following are four of them.

  1. The Red Dragon (Rush Hour 2)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWHt-vjS2ls

Inspector Lee, portrayed by Jackie Chan, and Detective James Carter, played by Chris Tucker, travel on vacation to Hong Kong in the second film of Jackie Chan’s spectacular Rush Hour series of movies.

However, when they arrive, they are quickly drawn into a murder investigation that seems to be connected to Triad criminal lord Ricky Tan.

The spectacular Red Dragon Casino, which appears later in the film when the heroes return to the United States, is one of the main locales in 2001’s comedy-action Rush Hour 2 film.

The fictional casino in Las Vegas, The Triads’ Red Dragon, was actually shot at the Desert Inn in Las Vegas. The Red Dragon is among the most amazing fictional casinos you would ever see on the big screen, complete with lions, acrobats, pyrotechnics, and Asian décor.

  1. The Bank (Ocean’s Thirteen)

Danny Ocean and his gang of thugs steal three actual Las Vegas casinos in the highly popular 2001 film Ocean’s Eleven: the Bellagio, the MGM Grand, and The Mirage.

The gang attempts to steal millions of dollars from the evil Willy Bank, portrayed by Al Pacino, in the fictitious Banks Casino and Hotel in the third film, Ocean’s Thirteen, released in 2007.

The real-life Vegas casinos, the Bellagio and the Palazzo, were utilized to shoot the inside of the Banks Casino.

  1. The Tangiers (Casino)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZvmGHb2zO-U

Martin Scorsese, the legendary filmmaker, has directed some of the most well-known gangster films of the twentieth and twenty-first century, and his 1995 picture Casino is no exception.

The epic crime thriller follows Robert De Niro’s character, Sam Ace Rothstein, who Chicago mobsters hire to supervise the affairs of the Mafia-backed Tangiers casino in Las Vegas.

With a fantastic supporting cast, including Joe Pesci and Sharon Stone, and its disquieting gritty realism, Casino is undoubtedly one of Scorsese’s biggest ever motion pictures, and it gets even more fascinating when you learn that the plot is based on real events.

The Tangiers, the movie’s fictitious casino, was shot in two Las Vegas locales. The Tangiers was built using the façade of the now-defunct Landmark Hotel and the inside of the Riviera casino, which shut in 2015.

  1. Casino Royale (Casino Royale)

Any genuine James Bond lover knows that Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale was 007’s first novel.

Apart from a 1967 comic film adaptation starring Peter Sellers and David Niven, the 1953 novel did not become a genuine Bond film until 2006, when Daniel Craig assumed the role of the world’s most famous secret agent.

The casino wherein Bond battles the villainous Le Chiffre at cards was situated in Northern France in the Casino Royale book, but it was relocated to Montenegro in the 2006 film.

Despite this, shooting for the fictitious Casino Royale took place in the Czech Republic. The exterior scenes of Casino Royale were filmed in Karlovy Vary, where the Grandhotel Pupp served as the film’s Hotel Splendide.

You’ll have to wait until September to discover whether Daniel Craig’s last Bond film, No Time to Die, has more casino excitement.

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