'Big
Short' goes long on comedy to look at 2007-09 financial
crisis
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[December 09, 2015]
By Bob Tourtellotte
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It
is not easy to find the humor in the financial crisis
that hit the U.S. economy eight years ago, but the "The
Big Short" uses comedy as a lens to examine the
intricacies and failures of Wall Street.
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The movie, starring Christian Bale, Brad Pitt and Steve
Carell and out in New York and Los Angeles on Friday, takes a
quirky look at the mortgage-backed security debacle that led to
the U.S. sliding into recession from 2007, and the money
managers who bet against the financial might of the U.S.
economy.
And it had nothing to do with short people.
"I wanted to show that (the financial collapse) was more about a
system than it was about individuals," director Adam McKay told
Reuters. "We need banking. Banking is not, in essence, bad ...
we just need not corrupt banking."
McKay, the filmmaker behind raucous Will Ferrell comedies such
as “Talladega Nights” and "Anchorman," said he had friends and
colleagues on Wall Street and therefore knew not to joke about
its people.
Instead, he adapted financial journalist Michael Lewis'
best-selling book "The Big Short" by taking audiences on a
farcical journey into the little understood world of high
finance that led to the recession and some 8.7 million Americans
losing their jobs.
"The Big Short" film follows real-life 'shorts' - investors that
bet against rising stock and bond prices - portrayed by Bale,
Pitt, Carell and Ryan Gosling.
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The 'shorts'- traders who are despised by 'long' investors who cheer
markets to ever-rising financial heights - correctly saw that the
housing boom of the 2000s was largely fueled by aggressive lenders
who suckered people into borrowing more money than they could
afford.
The bad debt was repackaged into exotic securities sold to unaware
investors. When 'shorts' such as Dr. Michael Burry (Bale) discovered
the flawed securities, they bet against them but faced making
billions of dollars from people who were going to lose their life
savings in the near financial collapse.
Like Lewis’ book, the movie displays the systemic farce that caused
the loss of jobs, homes and savings. It also explores the social
conscience of some Wall Streeters who know every trade has two sides
– winners and losers.
"It's got a lot of different gears to it, and that's what life has,"
McKay said.
(Editing by Piya Sinha-Roy, Bernard Orr)
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