The Big Short
Dir: Adam McKay
2015
*****
I liked Anchorman:
The Legend of Ron Burgundy and
thought Adam McKay's script for Ant-Man was great but 2015's The Big
Short is something quite special from the director who, it is safe to say, has
been producing fairly repetitive and rather samey comedy films for
quite a while, most of which star Will Ferrell and most of which
I absolutely loath. Brad Pitt's production company Plan B hired him
to adapt Michael Lewis' The Big Short: Inside The Doomsday Machine,
a novel based on the financial crisis of
2008, because they wanted a funny approach but nothing too satirical. If
it were up to me Adam McKay would have been one of my last
choices but luckily it wasn't, as I would have been wrong.
A couple of films have been released on the subject, both Margin
Call and Inside
Job are very good, Margin Call being the stylish drama and Inside Job
the cutting edge documentary, The Big Short sort of comes in from
left-field and turns the ins and outs of the financial
crisis into understandable entertainment. The two previous films were
education and relatively easy to follow but Adam
McKay goes one further and gets in a few recognizable faces including
singer/actress Selena Gomez, celebrity chief Anthony Bourdain and
actress Margot Robbie to explain
to the audience exactly how the crisis came about. Selena Gomez
sits with economist Richard Thaler at a craps table and explains
borrowing, Anthony Bourdain explains
different mortgages by comparing them to the ingredients of fish pie and Margot Robbie says something
that's probably very important while sipping champagne and bathing in
a bubble bath with sea views. Naked. It's this sort of thing that makes
The Big Short shine that little bit brighter and gets the attention of
audiences who might not be all that interested in learning
about economics. Thanks to the film's brilliant script, clever structure
and fantastic editing, it soon becomes quite clear that everyone should be
paying attention. The last line of dialogue is as
eerily poignant as it is important for everyone to understand, so I'm
thrilled the film has stirred up the hype it has, and it certainly deserves
every success it achieves. The performances from the all star cast are
brilliant. Christian Bale's depiction of Dr. Michael Burry is very
convincing and Steve Carell and his team including Hamish Linklater, Jeremy
Strong and Rafe Spall add some real guts to the story. Ryan Gosling glues the story
together brilliantly as narrator and John Magaro, Fin Wittrock and Brad Pitt
give the story that important down to earth feel that gives the audience their
way in to the story as it were. The names have been changed but
everyone depicted is real and what happens in the film happened in real
life, unless otherwise stated, which it is on a couple
of ingenious occasions. It is often hard to judge what is more
effective; a thorough documentary or a dramatic
reconstruction. Documentaries can be informative but also quite
boring depending on the subject and dramatic reconstructions can be
inaccurate and misleading. The Big Short is the best of both worlds,
informative, dramatic but most importantly, on point. A
fantastic achievement.
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