Synopsis
A gambling addict faces a conflict when entrusted with keeping a bunch of money that isn't his.
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Cast
- Jake JohnsonEddie Garrett
- Aislinn DerbezEva
- Joe Lo TruglioRon
- Keegan-Michael KeyGene
- Nicky ExcitementNick
- Rony ShemonRony
- Morgan NgChinatown Casino Doorman
- Edward KaihatsuChinatown Casino Bartender
- Adrian JassoAdrian
- José Antonio GarcíaMichael
- 91
The Playlist
The film doesn’t feel like a fiction. Instead, it plays like one of those great stories you hear late night over beers, and marvel, thinking, “That’s so wild it can’t be true… But I hope it its.” - 90
Variety
Funny, warm, and broken-in in all the right ways, Win It All marries Swanberg’s loping, observational style with a plot that wouldn’t have been out of place in an old-school Warner Bros. melodrama, and ends up dealing a surprisingly strong hand. - 88
Chicago Sun-Times
Win It All is just the latest stellar collaboration between Swanberg and Johnson.... This is their most conventional film in terms of story arc, but it still has a nifty, indie-without-trying-to-be-hipster feel. - 83
Consequence
This isn’t about the inner mechanics of the game, and it’s not even strictly a film about gambling, per se. It’s a dense character study that rests on the shoulders of Johnson, who delivers his strongest performance to date, casually handling every scene with a magnetism that recalls the likes of ’70s era De Niro or even the aforementioned Caan. - 83
IndieWire
By making a satisfactory crowdpleaser that doesn’t overextend itself, Swanberg has delivered his most traditional movie to date — and for this prolific filmmaker, who spent ages defying conventions, that’s nothing short of a radical step forward. - 80
The Hollywood Reporter
Suffice it to say that what satisfies on one level raises questions on others, and that certain plot points mightn't play as well without someone as charismatic as Johnson putting them across. - 80
The New Yorker
With a teeming cast of vibrantly unglamorous Chicago characters who hold Eddie in a tight social web, Swanberg—aided greatly by Johnson’s vigorous performance—makes the gambler’s panic-stricken silence all the more agonizing, balancing the warm veneer of intimate normalcy with the inner chill of secrets and lies. - 75
Slant Magazine
There's an artisanal scruffiness to Win It All that testifies to Joe Swanberg’s quiet fluidity as a filmmaker.