Trading Places Comments

  • Barrett 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    A comedy that explores the impact of the environment on people, exaggerated and bantering, it is thought-provoking. Jamie Lee Curtis contributes welfare to the...

  • Alexys 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    The variant version of the Beggar Prince, thinks of himself too much, one day he will know the fate of laughing at...

  • Vincent 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    7.5/10 points. At first glance, a remake of Blu-ray. Relatively easy and simple light comedy. . . I saw Jamie Lee Curtis again and just re-watched "A Fish Named Wanda". . . It's still the 80s movies that opened up, and if they didn't agree with them, they would be topless. ....

  • Chelsea 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    I bet we shall get rich in the same...

  • Mitchell 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    Economy is synonymous with transaction behavior. As long as there is a transaction, you need to learn to evaluate whether the transaction is worthwhile, and you need to see the secrets of the counterparty. The core principles learned in trading are applicable to any country in the world wherever there is a transaction. It's purely a...

  • Allison 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    The environment is absolutely important for human development. There will be great differences in what resources are available on what platform, and the way of thinking will be different from the perspective of the problem. However, the environment is not the only influencing factor, internal factors are definitely also very important. If Valentine was not a smart person and did not have the first-hand understanding of the market brought by life at the bottom, even if he was given these...

  • Harley 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    Believing that people are created by the environment, two rich men reversed the identities of a poor man and a rich man and started an experiment. Comedian Eddie is exaggerated and funny. The film shows the racial discrimination in Philadelphia at the time and the ruthlessness of the upper class society of the capitalist class. Coming to America five years later saw two rich men who had become beggars turning over....

  • Kelsie 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    Comedy with a strong cast (almost all the main roles are nominated or Oscars), and more importantly, the plot is not conventional at...

  • Clement 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    I've seen Hitchcock's avengers, this is also, the fate flips in an instant. Unexpectedly, that woman was Jamie Lee Curtis again, and she happened to be a new female coach in the gym, and she looked alike. . But it's...

  • Angel 2021-11-13 08:01:25

    What happened at the end of the film? Both Dan and Murphy had tampered with the inside information of the Ministry of Agriculture that the Duke brothers tried to illegally obtain about the future orange harvest, and changed the expectation from being optimistic to very bad. Since bad prices are bound to rise sharply, the Duke brothers instructed traders to continue buying regardless of the price. Other traders felt that the two of them must have the inside story, so they followed the trend and...

Extended Reading

Trading Places quotes

  • Louis Winthorpe III: [after trading ends on FCOJ, he and Billy Ray are quickly finalizing up some last minute sales. Once they're finished, they both look up to see the cost at 29. They then look at one another and scream in celebration and hug. After they're finished, they see the Dukes looking at them] Happy New Year!

    Randolph Duke: [He drops their now-worthless sales papers on the floor]

    [hoarsely]

    Randolph Duke: Winthorpe.

    Mortimer Duke: [stunned] Valentine.

    Billy Ray Valentine: Hey! How'd y'all make out today?

    Mortimer Duke: How could you do this to us after everything we've done for you?

    Billy Ray Valentine: Oh, see, I made Louis a bet here. See, Louis bet me that we couldn't both get rich and put y'all in the poor house at the same time. He didn't think we could do it. I won.

    Louis Winthorpe III: [grinning] I lost.

    [Pulls it out of his breast pocket and shows it]

    Louis Winthorpe III: One dollar.

    Billy Ray Valentine: [Accepting it] Thank you, Louis.

    Louis Winthorpe III: After you.

    Billy Ray Valentine: Certainly.

    [They both leave with Billy Ray doing Eddie's "laugh" and Lewis giving the Dukes the Aykroyd "stare"]

  • Randolph Duke: Exactly why do you think the price of pork bellies is going to keep going down, William?

    Billy Ray Valentine: Okay. Pork belly prices have been dropping all morning, which means that everybody's waiting for it to hit rock bottom so they can buy cheap and go long. Which means that the people who own the pork belly contracts are goin' bat-shit. They're saying, "Hey, we're losing all our goddamn money, and Christmas is just around the corner, and I ain't gonna have no money to buy my son the G.I. Joe with the kung-fu grip, right? And my wife won't f... my wife won't make love to me 'cuz I ain't got no money, right?" So they're panicking right now, they're screaming "SELL! SELL!" to get out before the price keeps dropping. They're panicking out there right now! I can feel it! They out there!

    Randolph Duke: [on the ticker machine, the price keeps dropping] He's right, Mortimer! My God, look at it!

    Billy Ray Valentine: I'd wait until you get to around sixty-four, THEN I'd buy. You'll have cleared out all the suckers by then.

    Randolph Duke: This is Randolph Duke. Advise our clients interested in bellies to buy at sixty-four. Mr. Valentine has set the price.

    [He punches up the numbers on his calculator]

    Randolph Duke: Do you realize how much money he just saved us?

    Mortimer Duke: Money isn't everything, Randolph!