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Review: In ‘The Big Short,’ Economic Collapse for Fun and Profit

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movie review of the big short

By A.O. Scott

  • Dec. 10, 2015

A true crime story and a madcap comedy, a heist movie and a scalding polemic, “ The Big Short ” will affirm your deepest cynicism about Wall Street while simultaneously restoring your faith in Hollywood.

Written by Adam McKay (“Anchorman,” “Anchorman 2”) and Charles Randolph, and directed by Mr. McKay and released in the midst of “Star Wars” advent season, the film sets itself a very tall order. It wants not only to explain the financial crisis of 2008 — following the outline of Michael Lewis’s best-selling nonfiction book — but also to make the dry, complex abstractions of high finance exciting and fun. Celebrity cameos (from Margot Robbie, Anthony Bourdain and Selena Gomez, among others) are turned into miniseminars on the finer points of credit-default swaps and collateralized debt obligations. The story swerves and swings from executive suites and conference rooms to hectic Manhattan streets and desolate Florida subdivisions. The performances, the script and the camera itself seem to be running on a cocktail of Red Bull, Adderall and mescaline.

It’s a trip. At the end, your brain hurts and you feel sick to your stomach, as can happen when too much adrenaline has been surging through your system. But that queasy, empty feeling is the point: This is a terrifically enjoyable movie that leaves you in a state of rage, nausea and despair. What is to be done with those feelings is the great moral and political challenge Mr. McKay has set for the audience, which I hope is vast and various. I don’t condone mob violence and I’m supposed to keep my political opinions to myself, but as soon as I’m done writing this I’m going out to the garage to look for a pitchfork.

Anatomy of a Scene | ‘The Big Short’

Adam mckay narrates a sequence from “the big short.”.

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“The Big Short” is not the first movie to reckon with the fraud and stupidity that brought the world economy to the brink of collapse not so long ago and that continues to exact a heavy toll in social misery and political alienation. Charles Ferguson’s 2010 documentary “ Inside Job ” remains the definitive cinematic account of the regulatory, intellectual and ethical failures that led to the crisis. J .C. Chandor’s superb “ Margin Call ” (2011) depicts the minute-by-minute bursting of the mortgage-backed-securities bubble, while Ramin Bahrani’s excellent “ 99 Homes ,” released this year, dramatizes some of the long-term consequences of the crash. But rather than rehash familiar ground, “The Big Short” achieves a fresh and brilliant synthesis of knowing insiderism and populist incitement.

Back in 2010, when Mr. Lewis’s book came out, it was as ubiquitous an accessory for business-class airline passengers as the “Twilight” novels were for adolescent girls. Part of the book’s appeal — a side effect of its author’s smart, breezy, plain-spoken style — was that it offered readers the illusion of retroactive prescience. You could read about the insanity of bundling subprime mortgages into highly rated investment products and think: Well, of course that was a recipe for disaster. Of course a drop in the housing market would bring the whole thing crashing down like a Jenga tower. It was obvious. We knew it all along.

In fact, almost none of us did. Certainly not the government officials and banking executives who remain at liberty and in positions of power to this day. Or if they did know, they didn’t care. The truth about what the banks and their enablers were doing was obvious only to a handful of people (one of whom, in the movie, is shown demonstrating the Jenga tower metaphor I just borrowed). Mr. McKay, with a comedy writer’s eye for archetypes, sorts them into an amusing array of strongly defined characters.

There is the antisocial numbers guy, Dr. Michael Burry (Christian Bale), a fund manager who sits in his office wearing a T-shirt and flip-flops, blasting death metal, beating on his desk with drumsticks and betting his client’s money on financial catastrophe. There is the righteously angry crusader, Mark Baum (Steve Carell), a disaffected Wall Streeter who sees a similar wager as the perfect expression of his contempt for the big banks (including the one he technically works for). And there are the young indie upstarts, Jamie Shipley (Finn Wittrock) and Charlie Geller (John Magaro), college buddies whose “garage band” fund was started with their own money and who want to show that they can play in the big leagues.

Movie Review: ‘The Big Short’

The times critic a.o. scott reviews “the big short.”.

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Linking these motley iconoclasts, and serving as our guide to the apocalypse unfolding around them, is Jared Vennett, a silky cynic played, with all the seductiveness that has made him a beloved Internet meme , by Ryan Gosling. From time to time Vennett will cast his baby blues toward the camera to tell us that something didn’t really happen in quite the way it’s being shown — or that, incredibly enough, it actually did. His slick, winking wit inoculates the movie against excessive earnestness and allows us to think that “The Big Short” is going to be one of those boisterous, amoral rich-guy movies, complete with geysers of Champagne and visits to strip clubs.

Which, to some extent, it is. Mr. McKay is not above using paid-for female nudity as a signifier of capitalist excess, nor acknowledging, more generally, the hedonistic aspects of greed. He is a naturally exuberant director, and his antic energy matches the rhythms of the story. The teams conspiring to short the market are impossible not to root for, and the work of the movie’s sprawling ensemble is never less than delightful. (This is the place to appreciate the contributions of Rafe Spall, Hamish Linklater and Jeremy Strong, who play Baum’s baffled minions; Adepero Oduye, who plays his liaison to the bank that houses his fund; and Marisa Tomei, who as Baum’s wife is like the only civilian in a combat picture.)

But when we root for Baum and Burry to be proven right, for Shipley and Geller to hit pay dirt and for Vennett to earn the right to be smug in perpetuity, we are also hoping for ruin to be visited on millions of ordinary people. Houses, nest eggs, jobs and lives will be lost. Brad Pitt, in a gravelly turn as Ben Rickert, Shipley and Geller’s paranoid guru, makes this point explicitly when he scolds his protégés for celebrating their good fortune. He says what needs to be said, but the achievement of “The Big Short” is that Mr. McKay doesn’t only underline the moral of the story in dialogue. The film’s final images, its abrupt shift in tone from exhilaration to exhaustion, its suddenly downbeat music (by Nicholas Britell) all combine to trigger a climactic wave of almost unbearable disgust.

Because, as we know — and as we can stand, from time to time, to be reminded — there is no happy ending to this story, no punishment for the crime. A movie is unlikely to change that, and “The Big Short,” in many ways a startlingly ambitious film, is modest about what it can do. It offers no solutions, and no comfort. The best it can do is put down a marker.

“The Big Short” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). All that is solid melts into air; all that is holy is profaned. Running time: 2 hours 10 minutes.

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The Big Short Reviews

movie review of the big short

Headlined by a star-studded cast, this legitimate must-see film tip-toes audaciously between biting satire and topical cautionary tale. You won't know whether to be pissed or be entertained and that's a powerful quality to pull off.

Full Review | Original Score: 5/5 | Feb 16, 2024

movie review of the big short

'The Big Short' is the film that we needed at this time.

Full Review | Aug 27, 2023

movie review of the big short

Trying to keep up with all of the fast market talk and financial blather wore me down. And there’s so much emphasis on it that the movie comes off as overstuffed and missing the human element which would have given it a more powerful punch.

Full Review | Original Score: 3/5 | Aug 19, 2022

movie review of the big short

McKay's defiant treatment just barely avoids becoming so irreverent that its sense of humor overshadows its significance.

Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Apr 25, 2022

movie review of the big short

Both annoying and effective as McKay manages to simultaneously inform and talk down to his audience.

Full Review | Original Score: 3.5/5 | Aug 15, 2021

movie review of the big short

The filmmakers do their best to bring this crisis and its human dimensions to life.

Full Review | Feb 26, 2021

movie review of the big short

Though presented as a jet black, indeed a cold-hearted, satire, it's concerned with reminding American audiences in particular just how close they came to economic Armageddon.

Full Review | Original Score: 4/5 | Feb 14, 2021

movie review of the big short

Subtle it's not, but the director's use of pop culture images and music to set the scene goes a long way to establish a time, place and tone.

Full Review | Original Score: 4.5/5 | Feb 3, 2021

movie review of the big short

It manages to illuminate how the economic failure occurred with scathing wit and highly-stylized editing that keeps you on your toes.

Full Review | Original Score: 8/10 | Jan 30, 2021

movie review of the big short

The Big Short is both the defining film about the most recent financial crisis and the defining film of its director's young career so far.

Full Review | Jan 7, 2021

movie review of the big short

The Big Short is a remarkable piece of cinema and nothing seems to change.

Full Review | Original Score: 5/5 | Dec 23, 2020

movie review of the big short

Even a talented cast cannot make this labyrinthine topic fully understandable unless the viewer is already modestly familiar with the subject matter.

Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Dec 16, 2020

movie review of the big short

There isn't a sense of winning or losing - merely weathering the periods of time when the villainy of banks and the government are at their most extreme.

Full Review | Original Score: 7/10 | Dec 4, 2020

The Big Short is as informative, insightful and innovative as it is drop dead entertaining.

Full Review | Oct 27, 2020

movie review of the big short

The Big Short keeps the narrative popping for a wealth of the run time.

Full Review | Apr 7, 2020

movie review of the big short

The standout, however, is Steve Carell's righteously angry Baum. Carell was primarily known as a comic actor, but he's been moving towards drama for a while now...

Full Review | Feb 13, 2020

movie review of the big short

McKay's masterful sendup of late-stage capitalism will leave you saying, "Never again!"

Full Review | Jan 13, 2020

movie review of the big short

Smart, funny, scary, ingeniously populated and a rollicking good time, The Big Short was such a left-field bolt from the blue and an enormously entertaining few hours in the cinema.

Full Review | Original Score: 4.5/5 | Sep 5, 2019

Steve Carell, Christian Bale, Ryan Gosling and Brad Pitt lead an ensemble cast firing on all cylinders.

Full Review | Aug 8, 2019

movie review of the big short

Teems with self-awareness about the complexity of Wall Street while using that opportunity to inject dark humor into what's otherwise a frighteningly bleak reality.

Full Review | Original Score: 3.75/5 | Jul 20, 2019