Fruit Machine

  

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While most people these days will play slot machines both online and in the real world a lot of people still enjoy a good oldfashioned fruit machine. With real reels and loads of artwork to admire they can often be a lot more exciting to play than those FOBTs. A lot of people find comfort in playing fruit machines more because tips that used to work 10, 20 even 30 years ago still work today and here is ten of the best fruit machine playing tips you can learn…

Ten Real-World Fruit Machine Tips That Still Work Today!

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10 – Enjoy Yourself, Keep it Fun

While this tip can be put against all kinds of gambling it is esspecialy true when it comes to fruit machines. Make sure you are not spending more than you can afford to lose and that you are having a lot of fun playing. When the fun stops…STOP! If you do feel it is becoming a problem to seek help or at the very least some guidance.

Free Fruit Machine Play

9 – Wax on Wax Off

If you like your fruit machines on the complicated side make sure you know how to play them. If you are not sure about what certain things mean like when the lights on the machine go red all you have to do is watch another player, or even better ask another player in the local arcade. There is always someone who knows how to play them, its just a matter of getting the right training.

8 – Snipping

While I am not a personal fan of this method it does work more times than not. All you have to do is keep an eye out for someone on a losing streak, wait till they are gone (give it 10-15 minutes) then jump onto that losing machine. More times than not that short break causes the machine to then start paying out.

7 – Percentage Payouts

Fruit machine ting

While putting £10 into an 80% payout fruit machine doesn’t guarantee you £8 back, it does mean it is more likely to payout than let’s say a 60% or a 70%. It might not guarantee you a win playing only the higher payout percentages, but it will increase your odds of a payout overall.

6 – Wedging

Are you in a skill selection and the moving bar is going too fast to get what you want? Take a look at the cancel button as it might be flashing. If you simply hold it down the skill wave bar will slow down making selection of what you want easier. While this doesn’t happen all the time it is worth keeping an eye out for.

Fruit Machine

5 – Button Tapping

If you have just had a win you want to tap those hold buttons because sometimes it will hold the win, but the lights don’t always flash, or do so after a short delay, so get tapping those holds after every win!

4 – Hold After Nudges

Have you got a hold immediately after doing some nudges? Simply leave it and don’t hold anything and press the spin button! On most machines, a win will roll in automatically, but this will only happen if you had 2 winning fruits on the win line.

3 – Extra Nudges

Has the machine only given you 3 nudges and you need 4 or more to bring in a win? Just nudge 2 winning fruits/bars in and leave the other nudge to the machine. After 20-30 seconds the machine will often bring the win in even though it only had one nudge.

2 – Double Holds

While it doesn’t happen on all fruit machines most of them will bring in a win after the 2 hold. So even if the machine keeps giving you holds its worth doing it time and time again.

1 – Coin Backing

While it won’t guarantee you a win it is still a sign that a fruit machine has not paid out for a while or hasn’t paid out at all that day. When you put a coin in have a listen to where it falls. If its quick to drop it’s staying in the top tubs ready to be paid out, but if it drops into the coin hub in the bottom of the machine it might be worth a play!

The Fruit Machine
Wonderland (USA)
German DVD Cover for The Fruit Machine, a/k/a Wonderland (USA)
Directed byPhilip Saville
Produced bySteve Morrison
Written byFrank Clarke
StarringEmile Charles
Tony Forsyth
Robert Stephens
Robbie Coltrane
Bruce Payne
Music byHans Zimmer
CinematographyDick Pope
Edited byRichard Bedford
Distributed byVestron Video
Pro-Fun Media
17 August 1988 (Australia)
Running time
103 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Fruit Machine (known as Wonderland in the United States) is a 1988 British film thriller starring Tony Forsyth, Emile Charles, Bruce Payne and Robbie Coltrane in the role of 'Annabelle.' The film, which was directed by BAFTA-winner Philip Saville, is about two gay teen friends who are running from an underworld assassin and the police.[1] It was produced by UK TV company Granada Productions. The film showcases the rising careers of actors Coltrane and Payne, as well as a future Academy Award winner, composer Hans Zimmer, who wrote the soundtrack.

The film uses a combination of adventure, buddy film, road movie and 1980s filmmaking to address a number of social issues that were pertinent to the times. Since its release, it has developed a cult following primarily due to its straightforward portrayal of British gay youth.

Plot[edit]

Eddie and Michael are two 16-year-old best friends on the brink of adulthood. They are both gay, but hold diametrically opposed outlooks on life. Eddie likes watching old films on video with his mother. Michael likes video games and the street. They are total opposites that argue like an old married couple. Leaving behind the grim, oppressive reality of Liverpool (in the 1980s unemployment rates in Liverpool were amongst the highest in the UK), they stumble into the bizarre fantasy world of a gay transvestite nightclub called The Fruit Machine, run by 'Annabelle'. There, they witness a brutal gangland murder by Echo that transforms their thirst for adventure into a run for their lives. Alone and afraid, yet hopeful, they wind up in Brighton with Vincent and Eve at Wonderland, where their path is strewn with manipulation, deceit and murder.

Cast[edit]

  • Emile Charles - Eddie
  • Tony Forsyth - Michael
  • Robert Stephens - Vincent
  • Robbie Coltrane - 'Annabelle'
  • Clare Higgins - Eve
  • Bruce Payne - Echo
  • Carsten Norgaard - Dolphin Man
  • Kim Christie - Jean
  • Louis Emerick - Billy
  • Julie Graham - Hazel
  • Forbes Collins - John Schlesinger

Production[edit]

Writing[edit]

The film's screenwriter, Frank Clarke, has stated that 'Echo the murderer signifies HIV/AIDS, and the dolphinarium is the sanctuary from it'.[2]

Casting[edit]

The younger brother of actor Craig Charles, Emile Charles plays the role of Eddie.

Filming[edit]

The film was shot on location in Liverpool, Brighton and London. Filming began in October 1987.[3] Included were interior and main entrance scenes at the Britannia Adelphi Hotel, Liverpool. Flamingo Land in Kirby Misperton, North Yorkshire was used for the fun park known as Wonderland.

Fruit machine classtools

Music[edit]

The soundtrack was written by then newcomer Hans Zimmer. A soundtrack has never officially been released; however a 20-minute piece entitled The Fruit Machine Suite appears on the album HANS ZIMMER: The British Years, a sampling of the composer's earlier film work.

The disco dance sequence used music from both Divine, a drag queen who had released several singles in the UK charts in the 1980s, and Man 2 Man, using their hit 'Male Stripper'. The film's title song was produced by Stock, Aitken & Waterman and sung by Paul Lekakis.[4]

Home media[edit]

Fruit Machine For Sale

The film has had two DVD releases. In the UK on 16 July 2007 and on 9 April 2009, the German-based Pro-Fun Media released a region free digitally remastered edition in Anamorphic widescreen (1.66:1), including booklet and trailer. A North American Region 1 DVD version never materialised, only the original VHS titled Wonderland.

Reception[edit]

A reviewer for London's Time Out magazine stated that 'Saville films Frank Clarke's script in a mishmash of styles, and the pace sometimes flags' but nonetheless that 'it's as camp as Christmas, and if it rarely hits the jackpot, playing along with it is wildly enjoyable'.[1] Another reviewer stated that the film is 'a hotch-potch of ideas woven together - making a mountainous and chronically unbelievable mess'.[5] David Hall stated that the film 'is a bit of a mix' but that 'the parts that shine however are quite beautiful, as too is the lush score by noted composer Hans Zimmer'.[6] A reviewer for Screen International stated that the film 'is so bursting with ideas and operates on so many levels, that some of them are inevitably unsatisfying'.[7] A reviewer for Variety stated that 'hesitating between love story and thriller, satire and ecological militancy, the film wavers in between and never fully commits itself'.[8] David Kehr stated that 'Saville's choices are consistently shameless, the film finally insufferable'.[9] Hal Hinson complained that elements of the film did not add up and that writer Clarke took an 'overprecious view of Eddie's sexuality'.[10]

References[edit]

Fruit Machine Ting

  1. ^ ab'The Fruit Machine'. Time Out. London. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
  2. ^Catherine Jones. 'Liverpool screenwriter Frank Clarke recalls the creation of his 1988 movie The Fruit Machine'. Liverpool Echo.
  3. ^'Ideal scores on Fruit Machine'. Screen International (620 ed.). 3 October 1987. p. 2.
  4. ^'Paul Lekakis'. JOYful Days. 29 January 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  5. ^'Fruit Machine (The)'. cgiii.com. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  6. ^Hall, David. 'The Fruit Machine / aka: Wonderland - US'. gaycelluloid.com. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  7. ^'The Fruit Machine'. Screen International (675 ed.). 22 October 1988. p. 377.
  8. ^'The Fruit Machine'. Variety (331(6) ed.). 1 June 1988. p. 12.
  9. ^Kehr, David (4 November 1988). 'Wonderland'. Chicago Tribune.
  10. ^Hinson, Hal (3 June 1989). 'Allies in 'Wonderland''. The Washington Post.

Dry Fruit Machine

External links[edit]

  • The Fruit Machine (1988) at IMDb

Fruit Machine Online

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