Quote first: The hero and heroine in this film do seem to have just picked up from gossip girls and made a stop on Wall Street. A play about Wall Street plays the warmth card, which is far from the topic. The heroine burst into tears at every turn, and I observed her eye makeup every close-up. In a word, the painting is simple but not simple. Originally, I watched this movie without hesitation for three reasons: Wall Street and Lehman, Oliver Stone, Carey Mulligan. What shocked me about OS was that Born Killer, when the heroine proudly sang I'm naturally, naturally born When it was bad, I was turned upside down by the director's use of music. And Wall Street 2 opens with a row upon row of buildings on Wall Street (or Manhattan, I'm not sure) that fits stock price movements over a certain period of time. Well, the Americans, though noisy imagination, are really unquestionable. Too bad this is an anticlimactic movie. Besides, Carey Mulligan, she is very fashionable for growing up education and this film, and her clothes in the film are always pleasing to the eye.
Another quote: "I guess the screenwriter of the second part is a complete outsider. The whole movie is like a story written by a screenwriter who was inspired by watching Michael Moore's documentary or Mike Lewis' book, full of The overused conspiracy theories, some terms like ABS and MBS that are thought to be esoteric and complicated, the kind love of a little boy who is engaged in green energy research and a little girl who is an NGO.”
Let me briefly explain to those who are not familiar with finance: ABS: Assets Backed Securities MBS: Mortgage Backed Securities (for example, this item in Lehman's 2007 report accounted for 23% of Total Assets, and then consider its soaring leverage and Repo105 , fluidity can be imagined) NGO: Non-governmental organization. I was surprised that Moral Hazards was explained so simply in the film - in fact, Americans like to explain everything very grassroots and easy to understand, just as they like to spoil Same as French, but the reason why many words are not popular among the common people is because it has a threshold for its use. I'm also surprised that the characters in the film use CDO, and CDS all use their full names. It seems that if you don't say Credit Default Swaps, others will think it's CD plural. This is too un-Wall Street. Furthermore, in the film, the singing and dancing and the beauties who frequently appear in the film, the eyes of the beauties are flowing, the lipstick and the perspective of who is the thigh. Every time I see this, I always wonder, what's your point? The Guo Jing-esque male protagonist is obviously not good at this, and the Huang Yaoshi-esque character also makes it clear that it's not money, it's the game between people. Obviously, he can't be classified as a township cadre, and he is confused by NYC's feasting. Could it be the director's point of view? Having lived such a long life, even in the 1990s, the male protagonists in Natural Born Killers have reached the level of treating the hunted women and abandoning them after indulging in them.
I laughed when the old man said that Hedge Fund needed brain when Hedge Fund earned 1 trillion from 100 million, and I laughed when the female host's website received 50,000 daily hits. Of course, I also laughed when the male protagonist was in a suit and leather shoes, and his legs would look good in English-style trousers.
Finally, the real estate mother-in-law, her voice is still so moving, 20 years of youthful youth, she will always be Louise in my heart.
All in all, this movie just uses Wall Street as a gimmick. The inner motivations of the characters in the film cannot be fully explained, and money never sleeps is even more incomprehensible. An embryonic B-ultrasound beat the billion-dollar Greed. Student tickets are 6 pounds 80, it was just too firm at the time.
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