Snake Eyes (1998) Hindi Dubbed (ORG) & English [Dual Audio] BluRay 1080p 720p 480p [Full Movie]

Download Snake Eyes (1998) BluRay 1080p 720p 480p Dual Audio [Hindi Dubbed & English]  ,
 Watch Snake Eyes Full Movie in Hindi Online Free on KatMovieHD .

” A Brian De Palma film “

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Snake Eyes (Hindi Dubbed)

  • Movie Name: Snake Eyes (1998)
  • IMDb Rating:-6.1/10
  • Director: Brian De Palma
  • Stars: Nicolas Cage, Gary Sinise, John Heard
  • Genres: Crime, Mystery, Thriller,
  • Quality: 480p | 720p | 1080p 
  • Language: Hindi | English (Dual Audio)
Snake Eyes is a 1998 Film Available Now in Hindi on KatMovieHD .

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Snake Eyes (1998) Full Movie Dubbed in Hindi (Dual Audio) [BluRay] :

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Snake Eyes 1998 Movie – Storyline :

Ricky Santoro is a flamboyant and corrupt Atlantic City cop with a dream: become so well connected that he can become mayor. In lieu of that, he’ll settle for keeping his comfortable lifestyle. On the night of the heavyweight boxing championship, Rick becomes mixed up in the assassination of the Secretary of Defense, an assassination involving his best friend. Becoming the investigating officer in the case, Rick soon uncovers a conspiracy to kill the Secretary and a mysterious woman in white. The conspiracy was shocking, but not half as shocking as the identity of its mastermind.

Review of Snake Eyes (1998 Movie):

Overblown, overdirected, overacted: that’s why I always enjoy DePalma’s movies. He made the statement that the camera lies 24 times a second, and SNAKE EYES plays on that theme.

De Palma’s camera is constantly in motion, roaming through the arena, casino , and hotel as if it had a life of its own. At the beginning of the film we watch Nick Santoro (Nicolas Cage) as he swims through the sewer (his words) that is the Atlantic City casino world. He tells us, “This isn’t a beach town. It’s a sewer. It’s my sewer, I am the king.”

It’s literally a dark and stormy night. A hurricane (a tv reporter is pressured to refer to it as a ‘tropical depression’ on the air) is coming ashore, and 14,000 people are gathered at a casino complex to watch a prizefight.

There’s a shooting during the fight, and Cage orders the exits sealed; who would go outside into a hurricane remains a mystery, but anyhow. There are two mysterious women involved in the incident, and as time passes he realizes that there were lots of people involved, possibly even his longtime friend Navy Commander Dunne (Gary Sinese) who is as straight-arrow as Cage’s character is sleazy.

By the end of the story Cage is working toward redemption- even though during the early part of the film it’s made clear that he sees everything as having a price.

There’s one point where he is offered a million dollars to reveal where one of the women (she knows a lot- too much- about a defense contract, and was talking to the Secretary of Defense when he was shot) is hiding. And there ‘s a very real chance that he might give in, or be unable to protect her when the danger gets intense.

Men in De Palma’s films have a way of failing to come through for women in critical situations. An executive couldn’t save his wife in OBSESSION. A young actor couldn’t protect a mysterious, beautiful woman in BODY DOUBLE. The nicest guy in school couldn’t keep the outcast/prom queen CARRIE from humiliation and its awful consequences. In the superb BLOW OUT a movie soundman rescues a young woman from a sinking car early in the story, but is too late to save her from a madman at the film’s conclusion.

So there is no guarantee of a happy ending. Self doubt weighs heavily in De Palma’s films, and often people’s best efforts are to no avail.

Admittedly David Koepp and De Palma’s script is something of a problem. There’s a complex conspiracy underfoot, and conspiracies are low on my list of compelling things- I got burned out on them in the seventies.

Far more compelling is the great fun that Cage has with his character. Boy, does he get to chew scenery here. Constantly in motion, talking on his cell phone (even during a hurricane; some of my friends can’t use theirs when a cloud passes over the sun), interacting with the low life characters around the casino.

And, oh, does DePalma have fun with the whole thing. Of course, nothing is what it seems to be. He retells the action from the viewpoint of this or that character: we sometimes literally see what happened through that character’s eyes. An important setpiece in which we finally see what really happened in clear perspective uses split screen imagery- and in the theatre where we saw SNAKE EYES the use of stereo sound was an integral part of the seperation of images.

For all the bravado of his performance, I was impressed with Cage’s ability and willingness to share the screen with other actors. In some of the retellings he is a supporting character or featured extra, and as an actor he’s more than willing to let our attention shift to someone else. A lesser actor might have been afraid of that shift of focus. Way to go, Nicolas. That’s a real sign of maturity as an actor.

So did I buy into De Palma’s bag of tricks? Yup, 100%. It’s nice to see a movie that isn’t afraid of the old razzle-dazzle. I do appreciate subtlety and complex ideas- that’s why I’m a voracious reader. I really don’t think I’d enjoy De Palma directing an adaptation of a Jane Austen novel or REMEMBRANCE OF THINGS PAST. The Merchant- Ivory people do that sort of thing so nicely. But it was nice to sit back for an hour and a half and let a master showman use illusion to fool us and let our eyes fool our brains.

On a five scale, Pops gives it four slot machines.


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