The Vegas Strip War Explained

Genre:Drama
Director:George Englund
Starring:Rock Hudson
Sharon Stone
James Earl Jones
Pat Morita
Madison Mason
Robert Costanzo
Dennis Holahan
Music:Jimmie Haskell
Country:United States
Language:English
Executive Producer:George Englund
Producer:Michael Greenburg
Location:Las Vegas
Editor:Gary Griffin
William J. Waters
Cinematography:Fred J. Koenekamp
Runtime:96 minutes
Company:George Englund Productions
Network:NBC

The Vegas Strip Wars (also called The Las Vegas Strip Wars) is a 1984 American TV movie directed by George Englund and starred Rock Hudson (his final television film), Sharon Stone, James Earl Jones and Pat Morita.

Plot

A charming Las Vegas hotel owner named Neil Chaine gets fired by his superiors from the hotel-casino where he operates. Determined to seek revenge on his former employers in a subtle way, Chaine uses his severance pay to purchase a decaying casino next door to his former hotel to turn it into the Strip's top attraction. Help for Chaine comes from an assortment of people who include Sarah Shipman a young casino hostess who tries to help him gain a gambling license, as well as Jack Madrid a flamboyant sports promoter who is asked to hold a boxing match at Chaine's hotel, while Madrid may or may not be on Chaine's side... depending on where the money should be.

Toward the end when Chaine's new hotel looks like it will be closed down because of various debts having rung up during his opening of the place, he decides to settle his debts by playing high-stakes roulette and craps at his former partners hotel to get the money the honest way and not through various and less-than-legal means.

Cast

Foreshadowing

When the film first aired, the public did not know that Hudson had been diagnosed with AIDS earlier in the year, despite clear physical evidence of his experiencing the symptoms. In a scene with Sharon Stone in a cell at Alcatraz Rock, Hudson quotes an Oscar Wilde line from "The Ballad of Reading Gaol". The quote is "that little tent of blue which prisoners call the sky" and Rock remarks that Oscar Wilde was put in prison for being a homosexual. The movie cuts to an implied heterosexual sex scene between Rock Hudson and Sharon Stone in the prison cell.