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poster of The Big Short
Rating: 7.353/10 by 8981 users

The Big Short (2015)

The men who made millions from a global economic meltdown.

Directing:
  • Adam McKay
  • Cate Hardman
  • Matt Rebenkoff
  • Cali Pomes
  • Amy Lauritsen
Writing:
  • Adam McKay
  • Charles Randolph
  • Michael Lewis
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Dec 11, 2015

Rating: 7.353/10 by 8981 users

Alternative Title:
The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine - US
Suur Vale - EE
빅 쇼트 - KR
The Big Short 2015 - JP
Chớp Thời Cơ - VN

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 02 hour 11 minutes
Budget: $28,000,000
Revenue: $133,346,506

Plot Keyword: based on novel or book, bank, fraud, wall street, biography, based on true story, finances, animated scene, historical fiction, loan, financial crisis, real estate, mortgage

Christian Bale
Michael Burry
John Magaro
Charlie Geller
Ryan Gosling
Jared Vennett
Finn Wittrock
Jamie Shipley
Rafe Spall
Danny Moses
Jeremy Strong
Vinny Daniel
Hamish Linklater
Porter Collins
Brad Pitt
Ben Rickert
Melissa Leo
Georgia Hale
Marisa Tomei
Cynthia Baum
Tracy Letts
Lawrence Fields
Max Greenfield
Mortgage Broker
Billy Magnussen
Mortgage Broker
Rudy Eisenzopf
Lewis Ranieri
Casey Groves
Fund Manager
Charlie Talbert
Lewis Bond Trader
Harold Gervais
Lewis Bond Trader
Maria Frangos
Exotic Dancer
Shauna Rappold
Michael Burry's Mom
Brandon Stacy
Michael Burry's Dad
Aiden Flowers
Young Michael Burry
Anthony Marble
Therapy Businessman
Silas Cooper
Therapy Businessman
Andrew Farrier
Burry's Analyst
Ingrid Steed
Lawrence Fields' Assistant
Vanessa Cloke
Goldman Sachs Sales Rep (Lucy)
Carrie Lazar
Mark Baum's Mom
Mychael Bates
Man Stealing Cab
Rajeev Jacob
Goldman Sachs Quant (Deeb)
Jay Potter
Deutsche Sales Rep
Garrett Hines
Deutsche Sales Rep
Ryan Broussard
Trader at Night Club
Jeffry Griffin
Jared's Assistant (Chris)
Joseph Brooks
Banker at Goldman Sachs
Colette Divine
B of A Lobby Security
Oscar Gale
Tattooed Renter
Cayden Arthur Miscally
Tattooed Man's Son
Dave Davis
Burry's Assistant
Wayne Pére
Martin Blaine
Kate Blumberg
Real Estate Agent
Billy Slaughter
Real Estate Agent
Heighlen Boyd
Florida Strip Club Dancer
Jay Jablonski
Rich Bear Rep (Matt)
Blaine Kern III
Second Bear Rep
Al Sapienza
Option One CEO
Marcus Lyle Brown
Merrill Lynch Rep
Tyler Kunkle
Doug from Goldman Sachs
Elliott Grey
Montage Lehman Rep
Jason Bayle
Montage Goldman Sachs Rep
Sophie Lee
Woman in Glasses
Michael Aaron Santos
Businessman at Casino
David Kallaway
Guy in Game Jersey
Sharon Landry
Woman at Casino
James Yeargain
Fields' Lawyer
Kelly Lind
Front Point Receptionist
Michael Brooks
Angry Guy on the Phone
Lyndsay Kimball
Diner Waitress
Robyn Wholey
Spin Class Instructor
Lara Grice
Deutsche Auditorium Host
Tony Bentley
Bruce Miller
Michael Kives
Banker in Deutsche Auditorium
Jack Millard
Lehman Executive
John Neisler
Seminar Leader
Joel Diggs
Cab Driver
Logan Crawford
News Reporter
Tim Wilson
Lehman Employee
Jae Suh Park
Michael Burry's Wife
Colin Lawless
Nicolas Burry
Selena Gomez
Selena Gomez
Sue-Lynn Ansari
Swimmer (uncredited)
Nicole Barré
Woman at Party (uncredited)
Alicia Davis Johnson
Bank of America Executive (uncredited)
Delia Sheppard
Barclays Bank Professional (uncredited)
Juliet Reeves London
Front Point Receptionist (uncredited)
Judd Lormand
Lawyer (uncredited)
Margot Robbie
Margot Robbie (uncredited)

izgzhen

Perfect film as I see. The actors are all awesome and characteristic. The rhythm is tight and deeply involving. I really like the theme -- 2008 global economy crisis. This film explains many technical sides unfamiliar to most of us, including those deeply affected by this catastrophe. Above the technical details, the main four roles have different philosophical insights during this event: Michael Burry -- Realistic, Objective, Knowing history Ben Rickert & Pals -- Murphy's Law Jared Vennett -- Distrust of the Big Corp Mark Baum -- Belief in the justice, even in against of the money In conclusion, 100% recommended.

The Movie Mob

**Overall, Adam McKay somehow found a way to make a movie about mortgage fraud profoundly entertaining while still informative.** Is it even possible that a serious film this well written, acted, and shot could possibly be directed by the same guy that did Anchorman, Talladega Nights, and Step Brothers? I know! Mindblowing! But Adam McKay pulled it off with an incredible cast and brilliant storytelling that took advantage of multiple narratives to keep the movie moving quickly. The Big Short was keenly aware that some of its necessary exposition was pretty complex and boring, so it found clever and entertaining ways to give those cumbersome details without losing its audience. As a guy that generally needs explosions and car chases to keep me engaged, I could not believe how much I enjoyed this film. The Big Short is an eye-opening film that tells a complex story with a fun, fast pace that keeps the audience engaged and entertained.

CinemaSerf

This is a fascinating appraisal of the antics on Wall Street leading up to the global economic crash that started with the collapse of the American mortgages market in the mid 2000s. Christian Bale, Ryan Gosling and Steve Carell are superb as the three men who identify and appreciate the risks, capitalise on the flaws and who ultimately epitomise the woefully lacking standards of regulation and comprehension by market and government alike; coupled with degrees of avarice that would make King Midas want to blush. The pace of the film is gripping - plenty of parallel threads that gradually conjoin to create a compelling narrative well exemplified by a cast at the top of their game delivering a taut, fast moving adaptation of Michael Lewis' frequently jaw-dropping book. The technique of using real celebrities (like Margot Robbie & Selena Gomez) to illustrate some of the more abstruse aspects of these bewildering processes is effective, and the supporting cast - especially Brad Pitt (who reminded me a lot of Robert Redford), as perhaps the most odious of all: he knew the likely pitfalls for the ordinary people of their scheming, but proceeded regardless - Rafe Spall and Finn Wittrock add marvellously to this. What is does lack, though, is any sort of political dimension. It sets it's sights fairly on the excesses of the businesses, but focusses not at all on the incompetencies of regulators and politicians alike, which does present us with a bit of bias as to the complicity of many, many more than just the bankers in this disaster. It has a degree of thinly woven humanity to it, but sadly illustrates all to clearly how profligacy and greed prevailed in the absence of any real sense of decency or integrity. The last ten minutes is particularly potent - or should that be portentous...?


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