But some years after Nucky Johnson [Thompson] and the boardwalk empire crooks [thugs] were gone. Though not the criminal element, of course. It mutates like everything else that’s looking to survive. But some are considerably more small-time than others. Eeking out a living from day to day as it were. But always looking for that big break.
For example, the folks here. The ones whose lives revolve around, “these things happen”. Just more often to them.
This is the place where everyone is looking to get rich quick. With an absolute minimum of physical labor. There must be a million cons. You’re either thinking one up or trying to spot it.
And there’s a theme in common with so many films like this: the one percenters. Those who play it outside the law, outside the “norms” of society. Sometimes glorified and sometimes not.
And when you bring someone into your life don’t forgot all the parts you know absolutely nothing about. Not that you can, of course.
That look on Lou’s face when he finally knows what’s up. Then the look on his face when he beats the odds.
Atlantic City
Oyster bar girl: Who are they?
Sally: My husband and my sister.
Sure, maybe.
Lou: That’s enough!
Grace: Nothing’s enough.
Sure, maybe.
Dave: You owe me.
Sally: Get out!
Dave: Who got you out of fucking Saskatchewan? If it wasn’t for me, you’d still be home making jam, putting out for lumberjacks!
How about this: "If it wasn't for me here?"
Sally [trying to distract a cad]: Can I lay a hard ten on a soft three?
I'd let her.
Fred [to Dave]: This is a very tight town. I only do business with the people I do business with. If the people I do business with find out I’m doing business with the people I don’t do business with…
Let's decide: is this a tight forum?
Lou: It’s all shit now. It’s a shame you never saw Atlantic City when it had floy floy. Remember the song, “Flatfoot Floogie with the Floy Floy”?
Dave: No.
Lou: Hep cat and zoot suit. That was the floogie part. But the floy floy. That was something special. Atlantic City had floy floy coming out of its ears in those days. Now it’s all so goddamn legal. Howard Johnson running a casino. Tutti-fruiti ice cream and craps don’t mix…Yeah, it used to be beautiful - what with the rackets, whoring, guns. Sometimes…sometimes things would happen and I had to kill a few people. I’d feel bad for a while, but I’d jump into the ocean, swim way out. Come back in feeling nice and clean, start all over again.
Nicky!
Sally [at restaurant]: I don’t want anything that swims.
Let alone raw?
Sally: Teach me stuff.
Lou: Like what?
Sally: What you know.
Lou: You want information or wisdom?
Sally: Both.
In other words, clouds or no clouds.
Lou: I’m her lover!
Grace [to Sally]: Oh ho ho. You wanna know his nickname in the old days? “Numb Nuts!” Men had names like “Legs” and “Bullets” and “Cookie”. His was “Numb Nuts”!
Next up: the old days here. You first, Mr. Pinhead.
Lou: They used to call Atlantic City the lungs of Philadelphia.
Dave: If we stay here long enough, we could be the nose of Philadelphia.
You tell me.
Shapiro: Your husband had a record.
Sally: I hadn’t seen him or spoken to him in 8 months.
Shapiro: Yeah, I know that and I understand that, and this is very unfair, but he…
Sally: I don’t even know why he was here.
Shapiro: Look, I know that, and you know that, but they don’t know that.
And it’s not the mob this time.
Lou: Don’t touch the suit.
Pick one: clubs, spades, heasts or diamonds.
Lou: A room. For me and my mother.
Incest?!
Fuhgeddaboudit it.
Chrissie: Oh, I never use seatbelts. I don’t believe in gravity.
More bizarre still: All those things she does believe in.