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Jinxed!

Jinxed! 1982

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Jinxed! Plot Summary

Read the complete plot summary and ending explained for Jinxed! (1982). From turning points to emotional moments, uncover what really happened and why it matters.


Bonita Friml, Bette Midler, is a Las Vegas lounge singer whose husband Harold Benson, Rip Torn, is a cigar-smoking recreational gambler with a long winning streak. It seems that he cannot lose to one blackjack dealer in particular, a man named Willie Brodax, Ken Wahl. When the casino notices Willie’s losing streak, they fire him, figuring that he must be jinxed. Willie then lands another blackjack-dealing job in Reno, Nevada, and Harold follows him there, forcing Bonita to abandon her lucrative singing gig to accompany him.

When Willie sees that Harold is now in Reno, Willie reports Harold to security, but they find no evidence of cheating. Milt Hawkins, Val Avery, who works with Willie at the casino, suggests that Willie “get a piece of” Harold the way that Harold “got a piece of” him. Willie follows Harold and eventually finds Harold’s mobile home. Willie then encounters Bonita, and the two fall in love. She tells Willie that she is tired of living with her domineering husband and wants to have Harold murdered. She tries to convince Willie to help with the murder plot, but he is hesitant. When she insists, he agrees to help her, but on one condition: if he can break the jinx, the murder plans will be canceled.

When the fateful day arrives, Harold shows up to play blackjack against Willie as usual. Harold’s winning streak continues, but just when he has wagered all of his money on one final hand, a woman sitting next to him becomes annoyed by the cigar that he has been smoking for good luck. She yanks the cigar away from him and extinguishes it. When he hits on his blackjack hand, he makes 20, but a surprisingly calm Willie manages to get 21, thus finally beating Harold. Willie has broken the jinx, and Harold is now flat broke. But when Willie phones Bonita to call off the murder plot, she doesn’t answer the phone.

When Harold arrives home, he pretends that he had won big so that Bonita will not know that they are broke. When Harold is in the shower, he is so distraught that he commits suicide by sticking his finger in an open light-bulb socket. Willie arrives, sees Bonita hovering over the dead body, and assumes that she had killed her husband. She assures Willie that it was a suicide, which makes him regret having beaten Harold. When Bonita hears this and learns that Harold had lost everything, she begins to panic. Willie reminds her of the life insurance money that she is sure to receive, but she points out that the insurance policy had a suicide clause that prevents her from collecting. She and Willie decide to make Harold’s death look like an accident.

Willie drives off towing Bonita’s trailer behind him and, while stopped in a remote location, places Harold’s corpse behind the wheel of the truck. Willie rolls the truck and trailer into a ravine, then heads back into town. When police discover the crashed vehicle, they conclude that Harold must have died in an accident, meaning that Bonita can now receive the insurance money. But when she goes to file the claim, she learns that Harold had allowed the policy to lapse, thus dashing any hope that she may receive benefits. However, Harold did leave her a letter that sends her on a scavenger hunt for clues that will instruct her how to get the money that she will need. The clues spell “J-O-N-A-H,” as in Jonah, the Biblical prophet who was infamously jinxed in the Old Testament.

Knowing what this means, Bonita heads to the casino, sits down at Willie’s table, and begins to play blackjack. During her gameplay, she smokes the same kind of cigar that Harold always smoked for good luck. She embarks on a winning streak of her own, upsetting Willie and his supervisors, who fear that his jinx has returned. After he is fired from this job, he drives away in his car, only to find Bonita hiding in the back seat waiting for him. She wants him to join her in a new scheme in which he will go from casino to casino working as a dealer, and they will split the money that they will make when she wins the casinos’ money by playing against him.

Jinxed! Timeline

Follow the complete movie timeline of Jinxed! (1982) with every major event in chronological order. Great for understanding complex plots and story progression.


Willie is fired for his jinxed streak

The casino fires Willie, convinced his luck is cursed in Las Vegas. Harold's own winning run continues, straining the couple's finances and tensions. Bonita is forced to abandon her lucrative singing gig to follow Harold and Willie to Reno.

Las Vegas, NV (casino)

Willie moves to Reno; Harold follows; Bonita leaves her gig

Willie lands a new blackjack-dealing job in Reno, Nevada. Harold follows him there, bringing his gambler’s lifestyle, and Bonita gives up her singing career to accompany them. The trio becomes a relocated, unsettled unit.

Reno, NV

Security finds no evidence of cheating

Willie reports Harold to casino security, but investigators find no proof of foul play or cheating. The lack of evidence leaves the plan simmering and the relationship between Willie and Harold increasingly fraught. Harold’s luck appears unbroken, which only fuels the underlying tension.

Reno casino

Milt Hawkins introduces the 'piece' idea

Milt Hawkins suggests that Willie could take a share of Harold the way Harold took a share of others, hinting at a lucrative conspiracy. The conversation plants the seed for a murder plot that hinges on breaking the jinx. The idea remains conditional on Willie’s ability to finally beat Harold at his own game.

Casino backroom, Reno

Willie meets Bonita; romance and murder plan form

Willie follows Harold to his mobile home and encounters Bonita, who falls in love with him. She confesses she wants Harold dead to escape his domineering control. Willie agrees to help only if he can break the jinx first.

Harold’s mobile home, Reno

The fateful hand; the jinx is broken

Harold plays blackjack against Willie and seems poised to win. A nearby woman extinguishes Harold’s lucky cigar, and Willie cards a 21 to Harold’s 20, finally breaking the jinx. Harold leaves the table flat broke, and the plan’s momentum shifts.

Casino table, Reno

Willie calls off the murder plot

After the win, Willie phones Bonita to cancel the murder plot, but she does not answer the phone. The tension between them remains unresolved as the immediate threat seems to fade. The two anxiously await the next move in their uneasy alliance.

Reno casino

Harold’s fatal return home

Harold returns home pretending he has won big, then goes to the shower and commits suicide by sticking his finger into an exposed light-bulb socket. Bonita and Willie react with shock as they realize the game has changed in ways they didn’t anticipate. The murder plot loses its obvious target.

Harold’s home

Mistaken guilt and a revised plan

Willie arrives to find Bonita hovering over Harold’s dead body and assumes she killed him. She insists it was a suicide, sparing Willie from direct responsibility but forcing them to reconsider their entire plan. The pair’s collaboration becomes a fragile balance of fear and opportunity.

Harold’s home

A staged accident to claim insurance money

Bonita and Willie decide to fake Harold’s death as an accident to claim life insurance money. Willie drives the trailer with Harold’s corpse to a remote location and rolls it into a ravine, where police conclude it was an accident. They later discover the policy had lapsed, wiping out their potential payout.

Remote location, Nevada

Jonah clue hints at the jinx’s reach

Harold leaves Bonita a letter that sends her on a scavenger hunt for clues on how to access money, with the clues spelling J-O-N-A-H. She understands the nod to Jonah, a figure famously associated with a jinx in the Old Testament. The mystery deepens as they chase the money through more theaters of chance.

Bonita’s residence / casino, unspecified

Bonita re-enters the casino arena

Bonita goes to the casino, sits at Willie's table, and resumes playing blackjack while smoking the same cigar Harold favored. Her sudden winning streak alarms Willie and his supervisors, who fear the jinx has returned. The tension between past and present schemes escalates.

Willie’s casino, Reno

The capstone scheme: dealer-turned-partner

Willie is fired from his job as the jinx reemerges, and he drives away in defeat. Bonita then hides in the back seat, proposing a new scheme: Willie will travel from casino to casino as a dealer, and they will split the winnings by playing against him. They set out on a fresh, morally gray path to fortunes.

Various casinos, intercity

Jinxed! Characters

Explore all characters from Jinxed! (1982). Get detailed profiles with their roles, arcs, and key relationships explained.


Bonita Friml (Bette Midler)

A Las Vegas lounge singer who grows tired of her domineering husband’s gambling churn. She collaborates with Willie to plot Harold’s murder, then tries to control the outcome to secure her share of any windfall. Her charm masks a calculating, survival-focused mindset that drives the film’s deception.

🎤 Singer 💃 Showgirl

Harold Benson (Rip Torn)

A cigar-smoking gambler with an extraordinary winning streak who dominates Bonita and finances. His unrelenting luck triggers Bonita's plan and sets the stage for a cold-blooded murder plot. His eventual despair leads to a suicide that collapses the couple's hopes and sharpens the moral consequences.

🎰 Gambler 💔 Controlling

Willie Brodax (Ken Wahl)

A skilled blackjack dealer whose apparent 'jinx' against Harold makes him targeted by the casino operators. He falls for Bonita and becomes entangled in her plan to kill Harold, but proposes a countercondition: he must beat the jinx before the murder goes ahead. His pragmatism and risk-taking drive much of the film’s tension.

🃏 Gambler 💸 Risk-taker

Milt Hawkins (Val Avery)

A fellow casino worker who colleagues with Willie and implies they should profit from Harold’s loss. He embodies cynicism about the casino world and plays a supporting role in pushing the scheme forward. His pragmatic but amoral stance highlights the atmosphere of cash-driven adjacency to crime.

💼 Confidant 💰 Money-minded

Jinxed! Settings

Learn where and when Jinxed! (1982) takes place. Explore the film’s settings, era, and how they shape the narrative.


Time period

1980s

The story unfolds on the late 20th‑century casino circuit, likely the 1980s, when Las Vegas and Reno were famous for flashy entertainment and high-stakes gambling. Neon-lit casinos, show lounges, and aggressive promotions of luck define the era and mood. The plot relies on risk, speed, and the promise of quick riches typical of that period.

Location

Las Vegas, Reno, Nevada

Las Vegas and Reno in Nevada serve as the backdrop, a neon-soaked gambling circuit where fortunes are won and lost on a single hand. The action shifts between gleaming casinos, smoky lounges, and a desert highway that hides a mobile home used for illicit schemes. The cityscape's glossy appeal and the constant hustle of casino life frame the characters' schemes and desires.

🎰 Gambling hub 🏙️ Neon city

Jinxed! Themes

Discover the main themes in Jinxed! (1982). Analyze the deeper meanings, emotional layers, and social commentary behind the film.


🎲

Luck vs Jinx

The central premise treats luck as something that can be engineered or broken. Harold's long winning streak and Bonita's insistence on a murder plot hinge on a 'jinx' that characters seek to control. Willie's final blackjack win becomes a focal point showing how luck is manufactured within the casino world. The tension between fate and calculation drives the narrative.

🕵️

Deception in Relationships

Bonita uses charm and fear to steer Willie toward murder, then withholds information to keep the plot alive. The pair's alliance rests on mutual greed and mistrust, and the prospect of insurance money intensifies their manipulation. The relationships are built on calculated moves rather than genuine trust, leading to moral decay.

💰

Greed and Consequences

Greed is the engine that propels both Bonita and Willie, shaping every decision from murder plots to counterplots for insurance. The policy's suicide clause and the later revelation of a lapsed policy reveal how financial schemes hinge on loopholes and timing. The scavenger-hunt ending, driven by money, underscores the ultimate cost of chasing riches.

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Jinxed! Spoiler-Free Summary

Discover the spoiler-free summary of Jinxed! (1982). Get a concise overview without any spoilers.


In the glitter‑laden yet gritty stretch of the American West, the neon glow of casinos and the rumble of endless highways set the stage for a restless road‑movie that feels part caper and part character study. The landscape moves between the high‑stakes rooms of Las Vegas and the quieter, lacquered tables of Reno, a world where luck is traded like currency and every cigar‑smoke curl hints at a possible turn of fate. The tone walks a fine line between dark humor and low‑key tension, letting the endless horizon amplify the characters’ private wagers.

Harold is a slick, cigar‑puffing professional gambler whose reputation hinges on an uncanny streak: whenever he sits across the table from a particular young dealer, his cards seem to bend to his will. He rides the road with the confidence of someone who believes the universe has handed him a secret advantage, yet the very steadiness of his winning habit feels oddly fragile under the desert sun.

Bonita is a lounge‑singer with a voice that could soothe a crowd, but at home she is bound to a marriage that offers more security than love. When her husband’s obsession drags them from the bright stages of Vegas to the stripped‑down rooms of Reno, she finds herself forced to abandon her own career and follow a gamble that isn’t entirely her own. Her restless spirit begins to sense that the journey may be about more than a simple game of cards.

Willie is the dealer at the center of the strange streak, a young blackjack hand who moves between tables with a quiet confidence that both intrigues and unnerves the seasoned gambler. As the trio trails each other across motels, diners, and smoky back‑rooms, a subtle tension builds: attraction, rivalry, and the unspoken question of whether the “jinx” is a myth, a curse, or something far more personal. The road ahead promises a series of high‑stakes encounters where every shuffle of the deck could shift the balance of desire, loyalty, and the ever‑present lure of a perfect hand.

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