Kenny Rogers as The Gambler (also known as The Gambler) is a 1980 American Western television film directed by Dick Lowry. The film premiered on CBS on April 8, 1980. It was loosely based on the Grammy-winning Kenny Rogerssong of the same name,[1] and stars the singer as Brady Hawkes, a gambler trying to reunite with a son he never knew, played by Ronnie Scribner. It was a critical and commercial success, receiving an Eddie Award and two Emmy nominations, and resulting in four sequels.
Gambler Brady Hawkes (Kenny Rogers) receives a letter from Jeremiah (Ronnie Scribner), the young son he never knew, who asks Hawkes to help him and his mother Eliza (Christine Belford); the two are living in Yuma with Jeremiah's stepfather, an abusive casino owner named Rufe Bennett (Clu Gulager). Hawkes embarks on a train in El Paso, Texas on a journey to meet him. Along the way, he meets young poker player Billy Montana (Bruce Boxleitner). Hawkes saves Montana from two belligerent cheaters and the two become friends. Montana fancies himself as a professional player, and is headed to San Francisco for an international poker tournament. Although Montana makes mistakes along the way (some of these include: trying to find a way to cheat or do some smooth talking), Hawkes makes sure that he stays on good behavior during the train ride. The duo help Jennie Reed (Lee Purcell), a former prostitute who has trouble with a train baron (Harold Gould). At the end, they confront Bennett in a gunfight.
Dick Lowry served as the director—The Gambler was one of his early works. The film was produced by Kragen & Company, one of their earliest ventures. The company had earlier produced two TV specials with Rogers.[2] It was Kenny Rogers's first starring role.[3]
Despite the film being destined for television, the film was shot on 35mm film like many movies and TV shows of the time.[4]
One of the shooting locations was the ranch headquarters area overlooking the Valle Grande valley, part of Valles Caldera in northern New Mexico.[5]
Ian Jane, writing for DVD Talk in retrospective, gave the film 3.5 out of 5 stars. He thought that the film had aged over the years, but that it is "better than [one] might expect", crediting Rogers's charisma and Lowry's direction.[1] Casey Broadwater for Blu-ray.com called it a film "you tend to like in spite of itself."[4]
^"Sundance Firm Goes To Ken Kragen". Billboard. Vol. 92, no. 38. September 20, 1980. p. 57. ISSN0006-2510. The 18-month-old Kragen & Co. now employs 24 people on both coasts working on management and television production projects. The company has produced two Kenny Rogers network tv specials and the 'Kenny Rogers As The Gambler' made-for-tv movie.
^Stambler, Irwin; Landon, Grelun (2000). Country Music: The Encyclopedia. Macmillan. p. 219. ISBN9780312264871. Telecast on the CBS network, it achieved the highest rating of any TV movie shown over the previous two years.