If there’s anyone who loves gambling and winning big, that’s James Bond.

Agent 007 not only survives against all odds in the field, he also manages to defy them in the casino in any game he tries his hand at.

For an MI6 operative who regularly complains in the books that his government pay isn’t enough, winning all that money must be welcome addition to his monthly salary, and probably keeps the ladies happy as well!

In this article we list the three top James Bond casino scenes and take a closer look at some of the games that James likes to play.

1. Dr No (1962); game played: Chemin-de-fer (Baccarat)

The film

Dr No was the film that for the first time took James Bond from the pages of Ian Fleming’s novels to the big screen.

Released in 1962, this movie cemented the image of 007 as a suave, sophisticated and utterly irresistible spy extraordinaire thanks to Sean Connery’s masterful portrayal of the character.

Set within the lush landscape of Jamaica, despite being a low-budget production, Dr No went on to become a financial success and popularised the ‘secret agent’ genre in the sixties and the years to follow.

The scene

It is no coincidence that we hear 007 utter the immortal words: ‘Bond… James Bond’ while busy playing a classic casino card game. Just like the James Bond in the book version, the super-spy is playing an old-fashioned version of baccarat known as Chemin-de-fer at a London club.

Very appropriately, James Bond indirectly introduces himself to the viewers while meeting a lady, Sylvia Trench, who has been observing him play the game. The scene is memorable for the way Sean Connery nonchalantly opens his cigarette case and gazes silently into her eyes before delivering the line.

One could say that this one scene defined Bond for the decades to follow and made Connery’s interpretation the definitive one against which all future actors playing the secret agent are compared too.

The game

Chemin-de-fer isn’t a game you’ll typically find online or at a land casino nowadays. Chemmy, as it is called by aficionados, is the original variant of baccarat which is still popular in the country it originated from; France.

Like other variants of baccarat, it is played by shuffled six deck of cards and the player who achieves a total of 8 or 9 wins.

The main difference between Chemin-de-fer and other variants is that players deal the cards themselves and take turns to be the banker.

2. Diamonds Are Forever (1971); game played: Craps

The film

Nearly a decade later, Sean Connery returned to the set to play the part of James Bond for the sixth and final time.

After missing out on the previous film, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, which starred George Lazenby instead, Connery donned his tuxedo again, this time to infiltrate a diamond smuggling band which turns out to be the mastermind of Bond’s arch-nemesis Ernst Stavro Blofeld.

Diamonds Are Forever is known for introducing more humour in Bond films, as well as for its powerful title song which was sung by Shirley Bassey and composed by John Barry, the man behind the iconic James Bond theme.

The scene

Since the film opens with James Bond pursuing a lead in Las Vegas it was inevitable that Her Majesty’s finest agent would indulge in a spot of casino gambling action.

Always keen to try out local customs, Bond naturally opts to join the craps table while in Sin City — this is the only time where he does so in all of the films. As always, Bond not only manages to win himself $65,000 by playing in his usual aggressive style, but also attract Plenty O’Toole, the first woman to be seduced by Bond in the film.

The game

Craps is a dice game which can be played by single player competing against the casino, or amongst multiple players.

Unlike other casino games, wagers when playing craps are made in cash not chips and the player must make bets on different outcomes which are represented on the table layout.

Whether a player wins or not depends on to total value on the dice rolled and in certain cases they may ‘shoot the dice’ more than once to establish a winner. Nowadays this can be done online – of course, there’s less glamour to it and we can’t imagine Bond sat in his house playing on his laptop. But it’s still easy and fun!

3. Casino Royale (2006); game played: Texas Hold’em

The film

Widely hailed as a much-needed reboot of the Bond series, Casino Royale injected fresh energy in the franchise which had lost its ground somewhat in the previous installments.

The role of 007 was taken by Daniel Craig whose Bond was a tough, gritty man who used his fists more often than the high tech equipment we were used to see in the films.

Ironically, for a man who loves gambling as much as Bond does, this was the first film in the series whose plot revolves entirely around gambling, with 007 going head-to-head against enemy Le Chiffre in a series of Texas Hold’em games.

The scene

The movie culminates with an exciting showdown at Casino Royale in Monte Carlo where Bond joins a poker tournament and has to wager using his own government’s funds with a British Treasury agent breathing down his neck and refusing to give stake him the money he needs to keep up with a game that seems all but lost.

The scene also re-introduces Bond’s faithful companion in many of the previous films, CIA agent Felix Leiter who offers to stake Bond and help him defeat Le Chiffre in a nerve-racking ending.

The game

Texas Hold’em is currently the king of gambling games online and in land casinos. It is the most well-known variant of poker and, when it was released, Casino Royale contributed significantly to the rise in interest in this game.

Blending skill and luck, Texas Hold’em has players compete against each other for the pot, however the game doesn’t simply depend on holding the best cards in every round but on making correct and timely decisions on when to bet, call, raise or fold.

Playing like Bond

All the men want to be like him and all the women want to be with him. That’s the Bond standard.

Although shutting down nuclear warheads and battling villains in outer space might not be the easiest (and most realistic!) way to be like Bond, beefing up your gambling skills and taking a chance at winning big certain is. You can try all the games listed in this article and many more online, for free and for real money.

Try it out for yourself. Simply create a gaming account, deposit some money and you’re well on your way to living the Bond life.

An area casino has announced it will hold an outdoor music festival this summer.

Mount Airy Casino’s outdoor stage summer series, which booked by Stroudsburg’s Sherman Theater, will offer Beers, Burgers, & Badfish, a summer festival on July 26, it has announced.

The festival will feature eight bands starting at 4 p.m., with the headliner being Badfish: A Tribute to Sublime, according to the casino’s website.

Tickets, at $20, are on sale now at www.shermantheater.com, www.ticketmaster.com and 800-745-3000. Tickets will be $25 on the day of the festival.

The show is the fourth for the annual series, with performances are on an outdoor stage erected aside of the casino at 312 Woodland Road, Mount Pocono.

Country music star Trace Adkins will perform at 8 p.m. June 6, jam band moe., which is celebrating 25 years as a band, on July 18, and a cappella troupe Straight No Chaser at 8 p.m. July 20.

In addition to the bands, the festival will feature beer on ice and food on the barbecue, according to the website.

“This is what a summer concert is all about,” the website says.

Sublime, a ska punk and reggae rock band from southern California, had the hits “What I Got,” which hit No. 1 on the Modern Rock chart in 1996; and “Santaria” and “Wrong Way,” both of which hit No. 3 in 1997.

The group’s 1992 debut “40 oz. to Freedom,” sold double platinum, and its self-titled third album in 1996 sold 5 million copies.

But lead singer Bradley Nowell died of a heroin overdose in 1996 and the group disbanded for more than a dozen years before reforming with new lead singer Rome Ramirez in 2009.

Badfish: A Tribute to Sublime, from Providence, R.I., has toured since 2001.

Could the former Odenbach Shipyard in Greece be the site of a new casino?

Brokers representing West Coast buyers interested in the 66-acre site think so.

Christopher Westfall of Pyramid Brokerage Company said his firm is in talks with not only retailers and restaurateurs about locating at the site, but also with unnamed casino operators. The developers also released a preliminary conception of what a retail complex at the site might look like, and a working name: the Parkway Commons and Waterside development site.

"We think a casino would be fantastic there," said Westfall. "We heard Henrietta shot down theirs, and we don't know yet if Greece would be in favor, but that really could be a great location for a destination such as that."

Westfall also would not say which other potential tenants his clients have been courting for their new development.

A possible casino has been a hot topic in Henrietta, where the Town Board last month passed a resolution opposing the establishment of a casino there, just a few weeks after the Seneca Gaming Corp., on behalf of the Seneca Nation, bought 32 acres of land off Clay Road as a potential development site.

Story: Historic Greece site may be sold

Greece Supervisor Bill Reilich said it was too early for him to gauge how serious the developers were about a casino.

"I think anyone with 20 or 50 acres of land anywhere around the Rochester area is going to be saying, 'Hey, this would be a great spot for a casino,' " he said. "But I'm really not giving it a whole lot of attention until I see something more formal."

And, he said, he's unsure whether he could support it. "In my experience with these locations, from what I've witnessed in Niagara Falls or Atlantic City, the design of these is to hold people within the four walls, where they eat there and shop there and gamble there and stay in their hotel. Then you walk 50 feet outside the walls of the casino and see there's no economic gain, no spillover to the neighboring parcels and all of the benefit has gone to the entity constructing the casino."

But if an application comes in, Reilich said, "we would deal with it. But until then, I can't take it seriously unless I have a request in front of me."

The concept plan for Parkway Commons shows a mix of office space, sport and recreation-based retail and restaurants with outdoor seating. The plan shows mooring spots for small watercraft and incorporates the channel Odenbach Shipyard used to launch its ships into Round Pond and then into Lake Ontario.

Westfall said developers hope to take advantage of the Odenbach site's location on Round Pond, access to Lake Ontario and its proximity to walking and bike trails along the Lake Ontario State Parkway.

"It would be great to incorporate those paths and have a detour into our facility," he said. "You could be walking or biking and come into our site for the restaurants and have a nice dinner on a deck overlooking the water."

Still, there are hurdles to overcome before the property, once a World War II shipyard, then a Cold War bomber and missile factory, then a scrap recycling center, actually changes hands. It is listed as a state Superfund site, and cleanup to remove a toxic mess of industrial solvents and other pollutants from groundwater and soil is ongoing.

Westfall said his clients were working with the state Department of Environmental Conservation to hash out a remediation plan.

"We are seeing what needs to be done to make the site usable," he said. "If they're looking for us to bring this up to drinking water standards because they want a day care there, I don't know if that's reasonable, but if they give us a plan that makes sense, this project has legs."

Demolition of an existing building on the site could begin in coming weeks, he said.

If the sale is finalized and Pyramid were able to secure a casino operator interested in Greece, there would still be significant hurdles to clear before anything could happen: The Seneca Nation has exclusive rights to provide Class III casino gaming in New York from state Route 14 in Ontario County west to the Pennsylvania state line. And, the Senecas' compact with the state would have to be amended to allow a fourth Seneca casino complex in western New York.

And, while state voters last year approved the opening of up to seven state-approved casinos, initial plans call for approving four in upstate New York, and none in the Rochester area.

BOSTON (AP) — The debate over whether voters should be allowed to decide the fate of Las Vegas-style casino gambling in Massachusetts had its day before the state's highest court Monday.

The Supreme Judicial Court heard arguments in an appeal over a proposed November ballot question that would effectively repeal the 2011 law that opened the door for at least three regional casinos and one slot parlor in Massachusetts. The court is expected to rule on the case sometime before July.

The anti-casino group "Repeal the Casino Deal" gathered the required 68,911 signatures from voters to place the question on the ballot. But the state Attorney General's office ruled in September that the proposal violated the state constitution and declined to certify it.

In court Monday, Assistant Attorney General Peter Sacks argued that the ballot question is not permissible because it would result in casino developers losing property rights without being compensated. He said gambling companies have an "implied contractual right" to see the casino licensing process completed given the significant financial investment they have made in developing and promoting their projects.

Sacks said the situation is akin to when a company applies for a government contract through the public bidding process. Applicants in that instance, he said, are entitled to recovering certain costs if the public body does not complete the process.

But Thomas Bean, a lawyer representing "Repeal the Casino Deal," countered that compensation isn't required since there are no existing property or contract rights. Instead, he argued that the state has the right to revisit and revise laws impacting "public morals and welfare" at any time through its so-called "police powers."

Justices on the seven-member panel pushed back on that assertion.

"The police powers don't trump the state constitution," said Justice Robert Cordy. "You can't say, 'We have police powers therefore we can take contract rights away without compensation.'"

He noted that state gambling regulators have already awarded a slot parlor license to Penn National Gaming to expand gambling at Plainridge Racecourse, a harness racing track in Plainville.

"So a five -year exclusive license that's already been awarded after a thorough process and at a substantial cost to the applicant can simply be taken away with a big 'never mind'?" said Cordy. "You can do that? Without compensation? Wow."

Both sides in the casino debate said that they were encouraged by the court's inquiry.

Michael Mathis, president of MGM Springfield, which proposes an $800 million casino project, said the justices were right to ask about the potentially "chilling" impact on Massachusetts' business climate.

"We deserve an opportunity to go forward," he said, adding that the company has spent between $30 million and $40 million in its bid to win the sole casino license in the state's western region. "To not even get to the point of opening our facility...is troubling, as a business that looks at investment opportunities and evaluates risk."

Slot machine revenue at Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course was down more than 10 percent in April from a year ago, the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board said Friday.

Hollywood Casiono's slot machine revenue last month totaled nearly $18.3 million. The casino, located in East Hanover Township, Dauphin County, took in more than $20.3 million in April last year, according to the gaming control board.

Slot machine revenue at the 12 casinos in the state dropped 3.6 percent last month compared to the same month last year, the gaming control board reported.

Statewide, April's gross revenue from the play of slot machines statewide was $197,760,977 compared to $205,155,406 in April 2013. The board also reported that the amount of tax revenue generated from slot machine play during this April was $105,766,654.

Haggling over legislation to bring a casino to Chicago has become a springtime ritual. This time around, state Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, has dealt out two new amendments that just might get the job done.

To our way of thinking, that’s welcome news, but only if the talks in Springfield have no influence on City Hall’s continued efforts to sharply reduce costs, especially the costs of pensions. Chicago’s finances are in dire straits, and a casino — years down the road, if ever — promises at best a relatively shallow pot of gold.

The Legislature has twice passed gambling bills, but both were vetoed by Gov. Pat Quinn. Last year’s version never made it as far as Quinn’s desk. But Rita has been holding meetings since summer and full-fledged hearings since January to try to shape a bill that can actually pass. His latest two amendments, floated at a hearing on Wednesday, both would give Chicago a casino.

The narrower version would provide for a single Chicago casino that could be the largest in the world, with revenues divided between the city and state. The broader plan would add four other casinos in southern Cook County, Lake County, Vermilion County and Winnebago County, as well as slot machines at most horse-racing tracks. Chicago’s casino under that scenario would be smaller, with a maximum of 4,000 positions instead of 10,000.

We’d be fine with a Chicago-only plan, because the city, which already draws many visitors, is the best place in the state to plunk down a new casino — or any casino. A city casino would not only encourage current visitors to spend more money while they are here, but also draw additional travelers and conventioneers, people who would spend money in restaurants, hotels and stores. Facing serious financial problems, Chicago needs the financial boost. We share the concerns of critics that casinos bring problems, such as binge gambling and crime, but that’s already here, just past the city limits and over the state line.

The Chicago-only plan might not fly in Springfield, where many lawmakers salivate at the thought of the casino revenues and jobs that could boost struggling towns such as Rockford and Danville. In the end, unfortunately, the plan that works politically might prove to be the broader option for five new casinos. A strength of both casino bills is that they call for all revenues to be earmarked for education, capital projects and pensions.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel has made it clear he wants to reform the city’s finances before pursuing casino revenues. He really has no choice. Revenues from a casino wouldn’t begin to flow, city officials say, and even after seven years of operation likely wouldn’t produce more than $120 million annually.

If that seems like a lot of money, consider this: Chicago’s pension liability alone comes to $19.8 billion.

At its very best, that is to say, a Chicago casino would never be more than a somewhat modest part of the solution to the city’s problems.

The question now is where Quinn and House Speaker Michael Madigan stand. Members of the Emanuel administration did not testify on Wednesday, but if the mayor wants this to be the spring that casino legislation becomes law, he needs to go to Springfield and make his case.

There is a real chance for a serious bill to emerge this legislative session.