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Why 'Margin Call' remains Wall Street's favorite movie

44 pointsby jmsflknr21 days ago

11 comments

snowwrestler21 days ago
One of the subtle ways in which this movie is so great is that it starts off as the story of a whip-smart junior person who discovers a shocking surprise... but as the movie goes on, it becomes clear that this was actually a risk that senior folks had already suspected and argued about, possibly for years.<p>By the second or third time watching it, I realized how much of the boardroom scene is kabuki theater. The CEO makes people get up and say their parts not necessarily to learn new information, but to milk the moment and bring everyone through a thought process. I think he knew what he wanted to do before he walked through the door. But he needed everyone else to understand the problem and believe in the drastic solution.
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xfactorial21 days ago
Consider the plot and consider it is loosely based on real events.<p>Also: it’s a highly quoted movie on YouTube where copyright has not been strictly enforced.<p>Every part of it is a specific area of the business: the lay offs, the move forward after them, the analyst crunching the data, the gathering after his discovery, the communication, the meetings and the decision making.<p>All of it from the perspective of a financial institution, knowing what we know: I wonder what would have happened if that movie happened 15 years before the crash and the public perception of the content (probably dismissed as “too Hollywood”).
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keiferski21 days ago
I think Margin Call is my choice for a “perfect” movie. It isn’t the most exciting, or impressive, or dramatic, or ___ film, but - it has absolutely no filler, every line of dialogue is exactly the right combination of explanatory and realistic, and the casting is incredibly spot on, especially considering that it’s an ensemble cast of big name stars. That’s as close to perfection as it gets IMO.
jmcguckin21 days ago
This is a great movie. Spacey is great but Jeremy Irons is fantastic. I really like the speech where he says &quot;Speak to me like I was a golden retriever.&quot;
ksec21 days ago
Margin Call - The traders perspective<p>The Big Short - Banking, investor, hedgefund perspective<p>Too Big to Fail - Government perspective<p>Most of my friends dont like any of the these. Even those who somehow got through them liked Big Short most.<p>For me Big Short is the last on that list. Margin Call being first by a long short and then Too Big to Fail.
kristianp21 days ago
I enjoy The Big Short more for it being a story about how dysfunctional the housing market had become.
Seanambers21 days ago
Margin Call hits the spot without becoming overly pompous like The Big Short. Its story is centered around Goldman Sachs.<p>And make no mistake Wall Street gambles full well knowing that the government will save them - Steve Bannon was right on the spot about that.
sylens21 days ago
It&#x27;s a fantastic movie and Irons puts on a masterclass. I don&#x27;t think I&#x27;ve seen Zachary Quinto in anything recently - seemed like he was huge in the early 2010s, going from Heroes to this to Star Trek
Rastonbury21 days ago
Wall Street is better imo, it is just relevant to the times of GFC versus the corporate raiders of the 80s
sometimes_all21 days ago
I also enjoyed Too Big to Fail, which was the perspective from the Fed and the big bank CEOs point of view.
lapcat21 days ago
This is no surprise, because people watched Oliver Stone&#x27;s 1987 &quot;Wall Street&quot; and took home the message &quot;greed is good&quot;. Michael Douglas played his part all too well.
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