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Brittany 2021-11-30 08:01:25
Many film reviews of this film were from the 12th year, and many laymen still don't know what a margin call is. As a result, everyone basically understood it in the past summer of 2015. At that time, several of my classmates were all crying and howling, and seeing the boss was gone. To tell the truth, you shouldn't let novices buy margin trading...
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Emmalee 2021-11-30 08:01:25
In the face of money, some precious things will die. For example, the bridge built by Eric, Sam's professional ethics, Seth's vision for the future, no matter how beautiful they are, they will bow their heads helplessly, hatefully, and sadly in front of money. Sometimes you seem to have the power to change the world, but in the end you find that you are always changed by the...
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Kirk 2021-11-30 08:01:25
I should be able to get an Oscar nomination for the original screenplay. It is a solid book with a compact plot. It progresses very quickly and is full of suspense. Each character has a personality that corresponds to its position. Money is the root of all evil. Kevin Spacey, Jeremy Irons, Paul Bettany, Simon Baker, Zachary Quinto, etc., each of the actors here has their own eye-catching...
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Halle 2021-11-30 08:01:25
The biggest criticism of financial movies is that some people are talking loudly, talking about the same sentences and arguments for non-professionals for half an hour and an hour, and then at the climax, they think that they are in foreplay, and they have all shot. The person watching hasn't hardened yet. Don't shovel, I'm...
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Cleora 2021-11-30 08:01:25
...It's not that finance students are too...
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Kaia 2021-11-30 08:01:25
Two and a half...
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Anderson 2021-11-30 08:01:25
I once loved a man named Jeremy...
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Madalyn 2021-11-30 08:01:25
When I commented, I thought of a Japanese movie-"I can't make it to work in a dark company...
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Aliza 2021-11-30 08:01:25
A handsome analyst (visually Lehman) completed the model left by his former boss during overtime in the middle of the night, and then found that the MBS in their hands was too risky and the VaR would be exploded at any time, so he summoned the superior, the superior was crazy, and then The decision-makers came to the meeting in the middle of the night in a helicopter and decided to sell all the bombs they had on their hands early the next day at a low price. During the process, the three...
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Bradford 2021-11-30 08:01:25
Hollywood's playmaking technique is to put the overall atmosphere in the lines and micro-scene narratives to the illusion. At a very tense point in time, it was made to pretend to be high-profile. And this is also a routine. The only thing to watch is Kevin...
Margin Call Comments
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Kirsten 2022-03-21 09:01:49
In the face of money, morality becomes inconspicuous
I originally wanted to watch a movie similar to "The Big Short" and searched for it, but I was a little disappointed after watching it, because the movie involved not much economic and financial knowledge, or it did not show the subprime mortgage from all aspects as in-depth as "The Big...
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Fiona 2022-03-24 09:01:45
Ah Q's harvest from watching "Storm of Interest"
What makes people feel is the scene of digging a hole in the final space. His ex-wife can't recognize his old figure. What's more cruel is that he is burying his only emotional sustenance dog in the world. Both his son and his wife are like those advanced charts in the office, and they are...
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Peter Sullivan: Look at these people. Wandering around with absolutely no idea what's about to happen.
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Sam Rogers: The real question is: who are we selling this to?
John Tuld: The same people we've been selling it to for the last two years, and whoelse ever would buy it.
Sam Rogers: But John, if you do this, you will kill the market for years. It's over.
[John nods grimly]
Sam Rogers: And you're selling something that you *know* has no value.
John Tuld: We are selling to willing buyers at the current fair market price.
[Sam lowers his gaze]
John Tuld: So that we may survive.
Sam Rogers: You would never sell anything to any of those people ever again.
John Tuld: I understand.
Sam Rogers: Do you?
John Tuld: Do *you*?
John Tuld: [pounding on the desk] This is it! I'm telling you this is it!