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The.big.short.2015 ~repack~ Guide

The film follows three separate, intertwining stories of investors who realized the housing market—specifically the subprime mortgage market—was a bubble ready to implode.

The third narrative thread involves Jared Vennett (based on Greg Lippmann and played by Ryan Gosling), a Deutsche Bank trader who acts as the narrator and facilitator. He bridges the gap between Burry’s discovery and the other investors. Gosling’s slick, fourth-wall-breaking performance provides the film with its cynical, comedic backbone.

Uses a blackjack game to show how "side bets" on bets created a massive domino effect. Key Financial Terms (The "Short" Version) the.big.short.2015

(Ryan Gosling): A Deutsche Bank salesman (based on Greg Lippmann) who learns of Burry’s actions and begins pitching the opportunity to other investors.

“You don’t understand. If we’re right, people lose homes. People lose jobs. People lose retirement savings. People lose pensions. You know what I hate about fucking money? It makes assholes of all of us.” The film follows three separate, intertwining stories of

The film ends with a stark, scrolling text revealing that by 2015, the banks were even bigger than before, and no one went to jail.

It is fair to compare to Wall Street (1987), Margin Call (2011), or The Wolf of Wall Street (2013). But unlike those: “You don’t understand

Unlike typical Wall Street movies—which often glorify the excesses of the rich or paint bankers as dashing anti-heroes— focuses on the outsiders. The protagonists are not the men causing the crash, but the few who saw it coming and bet against the American economy.