
A priceless American Indian artifact is stolen during a poker game at an Indian casino, setting off a chaotic chase. The pursuit involves Elvis impersonators, Native American characters, modern cowboys, a towering blonde assassin, a college frat boy, a corrupt sheriff, and a prostitute, all entangled in a wild and unpredictable situation.
Does Guns, Girls and Gambling have end credit scenes?
No!
Guns, Girls and Gambling does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of Guns, Girls and Gambling, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Gary Oldman
Elvis Elvis

Matthew Willig
The Indian

Chris Kattan
Gay Elvis

Christian Slater
John Smith

Dane Cook
Sheriff Hutchins

Eddie Spears
Dark Eyes

Sam Trammell
Sheriff Cowley

Michael Spears
Redfoot

Jeff Fahey
The Cowboy

Powers Boothe
The Rancher

Tony Cox
Little person Elvis

Helena Mattsson
The Blonde

Marc Winnick
The College Kid

Anthony Brandon Wong
Asian Elvis

Andrea Pineda
Contest Registrar

Danny James
Mo

Heather Roop
Vivian

Gordon Tootoosis
The Chief

Anthony Azizi
Mr. Crow

Paulina Gretzky
The Deputy

Jaci Twiss
Young Mother

Tod Huntington
Officer

Lawrence Dwyer
Young Father

Henry Boger
The Ranch Hand

Jeff Jonas
Ranch Hand #2

Alberta Mason
Old Indian Woman

Milagros Peterson
Cocktail Waitress

Ron Peterson
The Gambler

Carson Schoenfeld
Young Boy

Shani Klein-Madden
Train Station P.A.
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Challenge your knowledge of Guns, Girls and Gambling with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
What job does John Smith lose that contributes to his bad luck at the start of the film?
His girlfriend left him for a doctor
He lost his job as a dealer
He was fired from the casino
He was expelled from the Elvis impersonation contest
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of Guns, Girls and Gambling, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
John Smith is Christian Slater down on his luck: his girlfriend left him for a doctor, and a rough night at an Apache Reservation casino ends with a wallet swipe by a hooker. He also faces defeat in an Elvis impersonation contest and then brushes a worse loss in poker against four fellow impersonators: Gay Elvis, Chris Kattan; Little Person Elvis, Tony Cox; Asian Elvis, Anthony Brandon Wong; and Elvis Elvis, Gary Oldman. The string of bad breaks piles up until casino security suspects he has somehow run off with a priceless Apache mask, sent from the casino’s powerful owner, The Chief, Gordon Tootoosis. Yet the guards quickly realize John didn’t take it, and The Chief offers him a staggering reward—$1,000,000—to locate the missing artefact.
A ruthless hitwoman, The Blonde, who speaks in Poe-tinged cadences, corners Gay Elvis but, despite her lethal skills, the mask remains elusive. John’s case leads him to Elvis Elvis’s address, where he meets Elvis Elvis’s neighbor, Cindy, Megan Park. The search takes a chaotic turn as they’re ambushed by The Cowboy, Jeff Fahey, and his partner Mo, Danny James. In the ensuing scramble, John suggests calling the sheriff, but Cindy reveals a disturbing truth: two local sheriffs—corrupt officials loyal to The Chief and to The Rancher—are not the kind of help they need. The danger grows when they cross paths with The Rancher, Powers Boothe, who explains that he recruited the Elvis impersonators to steal the mask—an artifact that once belonged to him.
A flashback unveils a darker history: thirty years earlier, a man who worked for The Rancher had the mask, and his family was killed by Apaches. The Rancher offers John a renewed shot at the money, but only if he completes the mission. John and Cindy press on and track down Asian Elvis, who demands the mask as the price of their cooperation. The Indian, Eddie Spears, arrives and tomahawks Asian Elvis dead, forcing our duo to flee once more. They race back to Elvis Elvis’s residence, only to encounter Little Person Elvis again, who demands the prize. The Blonde appears and kills Little Person Elvis, allowing John and Cindy to escape—but not for long, because the two sheriffs apprehend them for multiple Elvis murders.
Dragged to the desert, John pieces together Elvis Elvis’s likely hiding place: a remote bus depot known as Station 12. Elvis Elvis is, in fact, the sole passenger on a stranded bus, until The Blonde boards and shoots him. As he lies dying, Elvis Elvis murmurs a critical detail before the satchel containing the mask is taken. The bus driver is murdered after confirming that both The Rancher and The Chief were alerted to the scene.
With the sheriffs in tow, John and Cindy arrive at Station 12, only to find The Blonde’s trap. The Cowboy and Mo crash the scene, The Cowboy kills the sheriffs, and The Indian arrives to finish the job by tomahawking the Cowboy and Mo. The Chief shows up, and the group moves toward the desert station with a briefcase bearing $1,000,000—the money The Rancher believed could buy him back what he once owned.
In a shocking turn, Cindy reveals she is The Rancher’s daughter, and she has been tracking John as part of a larger scheme. The Blonde emerges from Station 12, badly wounded but unbowed, and The Indian makes a final attack only to be killed by her. She commands everyone to deliver John to her with the money, or else face dire consequences. John steps inside the station, where the two share a tense, intimate moment before he and The Blonde confront The Rancher and The Chief.
Behind the tension lies a deeper truth: The Blonde was once John’s girlfriend, who stayed by his side to help seek revenge for his lost family, and Elvis Elvis’s whispered dying words hint that the mask’s fate could still be decided. The Blonde warns that she will return to finish anyone who dares retaliate, and she departs with the satchel, the money, and the hooker who stole John’s wallet—the very doctor The Blonde once left him for.
In a quiet, decisive turn of fate, John departs Station 12 with both the briefcase and the mask, finding that the artifact had not truly been destroyed. He takes the mask back to his Hopi protector from thirty years earlier, completing the long, patient work his father began: returning the mask to its rightful owners and restoring balance to a story built on loyalties, betrayals, and a desire for justice that finally finds its way home.
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