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| Inside Job BlurayAs He Did With The occupation of Iraq in No End in Sight, Charles Ferguson shines a light on the global Financial Crisis in Inside Job. Accompanied by narration from Matt Damon, Ferguson Begins and ends in Iceland, a country flourishing That Gave American-style banking a try - and Paid The Price. Then he looks at The Spectacular Rise and Fall of deregulation cataclysmic In The United States. Unlike was Alex Gibney's fiscal film, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room and Casino Jack Ferguson builds historical narrative around Dozens of players, interviewing authors, bank managers, Government Ministers, and Even a Psychotherapist, Who Speak to a Culture That encouraged Gordon Gekko Behavior-like, to The Number of Those Who Declined to how, like Alan Greenspan, SI event widely. Though the director for isn't as combative as Michael Moore Asks tough questions and he elicits from Squirm SEVERAL participants, notably Treasury secretary David McCormick train and Columbia dean Glenn Hubbard, George W. Bush's Economic Adviser. Their reactions are Understand, sincere the Borders Between Wall Street, Washington, & the Ivy League Dissolved years ago, it's hard to know Who to trust Conflicts of Interest When run rampant. If Reagan and Bush Takes Ferguson to task for Tax Cuts That Benefit The Wealthy, he Criticize Clinton for Encouraging derivatives and Obama for failing to Deliver On The Promise of Reform. And In The category of Unlikely Heroes: Train governor Eliot Spitzer, Who Fought Against Fraud as New York's attorney general (he's the subject of Gibney's documentary Client 9). - Kathleen C. Fennessy CommentsAnglea Zuckerberg says... If you want to understand what has happened to our economy you have to see this movie.This is the best documentary I've seen in a long time.It is less one-sided than the usual expose style film.It puts the facts before you and lets you decide what you think.Chances are, you'll think you REALLY want something to be done about regulating the financial industry. It shows what an engineered Inside Job the Great Recession was and is.And it shows how the financial industry controls Washington. The people responsible for this talk about it in the most off-hand manner, as if taking down the world economy for their own gain was simply their right, and we should just shut up already.Unbelievable egotism and deceit!Make sure you see and take several people with you.The more who know about this, the better. Posted on September 18, 2011 Lennie Kowalke says... "Inside Job" is a very thorough analysis of the recent and enduring global financial crisis. It gives the chapter by chapter time line but fails to give us what to do next? There may be no easy answer as it looks like the dishonesty and greed was endemic to Wall Street and the top tiers of government. This is a crisis that is world-wide and we are still looking for solutions today. There must have been no guards at the gates of greed - no regulations on convoluted financial instruments. It absolutely astounded me that multiple people could insure the same property and then bet against it. The many interviews and research were well organized.Many of the key people in government and at top financial organizations refused to be interviewed, although the evidence of conflict of interest in many decisions is overwhelming. High level politicians, journalists, financial managers and many others were interviewed on how a crisis of this magnitude happened. It cost over $20 trillion and causes grief with unemployment and on-going foreclosures. It is an amazing piece of work, well worth watching, discussing and action. The rich get richer, more power, and blatant disregard for the common good. Posted on September 18, 2011 Reggie Delessio says... Charles Ferguson's "Inside Job" is a brilliant and totally persusaive documentary about the economic meltdown of 2008. Relying strictly on recorded fact and expert testimony, the film is an efficient as the slitting of a throat, and leaves us in no doubt as to whose throats are being slit. Narrated by Matt Damon, "Inside Job" shows us step by step how financial deregulation, reckless lending and an insane reliance on the derivatives market led this country and the world to the brink of financial ruin. It is painful to watch Frederic Mishkin, a former member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, sputter like a schoolboy when asked to explain why he wrote a report praising Iceland's financial system when in fact the entire country was circling the bowl. It is infuriating to see the bristling indignation of Glenn Hubbard, George W. Bush's chief economic advisor, when asked why he advocated financial deregulation that ended up costing U.S. taxpayers trillions of dollars. What is even more painful and infuriating, however, is to see mortgage foreclosures continue at a record pace while the so-called recovery is too weak to support job creation on any meaningful level. The only place "Inside Job" falls down is at its end, when it issues a half-hearted call to arms. Ferguson has already made the point that Barack Obama has offered only token opposition to Wall Street kleptomania and continues to reward the same people and activities that Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush rewarded in succession. What conceivable presidential candidate in 2012--one, that is, with a prayer of getting elected--would do differently? No question about it--U.S. taxpayers are stuck paying through the nose to make sure Wall Street executives continue to receive their hundred-million-dollar bonuses. Posted on September 18, 2011 Richie Kimmes says... Inside Job is a documentary written and directed by Charles Ferguson, narrated by Matt Damon and starring Ronald Reagan, Alan Greenspan, Bill Clinton, Henry Paulson, Robert Rubin, and many others whose obsession with deregulation and whose regulatory failures led to the banking crisis and worldwide recession that began in 2008 with the bankruptcy of Lehman and AIG and the collapse of GM and Chrysler. The movie dissects the origin and development of the mortgage bubble, it's meltdown and the resulting world recession which resulted in 30 million people losing their jobs. Like Michael Moore's documentaries, Inside Job is composed of ambush interviews, news clips and comments most of the key players who declined to be interviewed and by critics of banking practices and regulatory failures beginning with the Reagan administration and continuing until the world wide economic crash which began at the end of the Bush administration in 2008. The documentary takes viewers step by step through the developments, beginning with deregulation debacle in the savings and loan industry under Reagan and continuing through subsequent administrations including, importantly, the repeal under Bill Clinton of the Glass-Steagall Act which had required the separation of banking and riskier securities trading activities since 1933. The elements leading to the housing bubble and the financial meltdown were deregulation of the banking industry, securitization of the mortgage industry through the creation of mortgage derivatives, excessive bank leverage creating excessive risk and failure of the bond rating houses to accurately assess the risk brought about by securitization of subprime mortgages. The movie is similar to several of Michael Moore's movies such as "Wall Street, A Love Affair." Inside Job's lack of Moore's humor is more than made up by the detail and clarity which it provides about the dogmatic faith in unregulated markets, abuses, growth and influence of Wall Street banking behemoths and how they have captured government economic and regulatory policy, including the recent weak regulatory bills signed by Barack Obama. However, one of the most compelling and damning portions of the documentary is its expose of how the financial industry pays economists at top universities and graduate business schools to write articles expressing their viewpoints without disclosing the payments they get for the "research" and serving as directors of the companies. Larry Summers, former Clinton Treasury Secretary, Harvard President and chief Obama economic adviser has made millions consulting for hedge funds. The Dean of the Columbia Business School, former Bush chief economist, R. Glenn Hubbard, and Reagan economist Martin Feldstein came across as arrogant and defensive when pressed by the interviewer about their ties to Wall Street and their role in the rush to de-regulation and tax cuts for the richest Americans. John Campbell, chairman of Harvard's economics department and Glen Hubbard were reduced by the interviewer's questions "to stammering obfuscation," to borrow a phrase from A.O. Scott's N.Y. Times review of the documentary. The most discouraging conclusion of the documentary is it's demonstration of how seamlessly the the baton was passed from the Wall Street insiders and fanatical Friedmanite free market economists to Treasury Secretaries and de-regulators in the Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush administrations. And many of the same true believer captives of Wall Street were appointed by President Obama, belying and undermining his eloquent vows to reform the financial industry. To borrow another phrase from A.O. Scott's review , the movie is "about a crime without punishment" and with millions of victims. [...] Posted on September 20, 2011 Philip Drock says... Only the truth is more stunning than fiction. This film exposes one of the most shocking and inexcusable collusions to defraud the working stiff in all of history. We like to disdain the barbaric, grasping greed of bygone feudal lords but our own contemporaries - if not our own kind - have immeasurably surpassed their appetites for avarice.Far from dry, Inside Job is a thriller. Only it's real. The global financial crisis of 2008, whose long tentacles still grip us today, was created by the same few whom it has enormously enriched and who will continue to be enormously powerful. Posted on September 21, 2011 Eldora Lubell says... This priceless documentary presents a devastating expose of the staggering Wall Street swindle that caused the economic meltdown of 2008. The interview with Martin Feldstein brought back to mind the hoopla of his appointment as chief economic adviser to President Reagan. The movie points out that Feldstein initiated the financial deregulation follies that led to the looting of the Savings and Loans and culminated with the passage of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, the lead sponsor of which was Senator Phil Gramm. It was truly depressing to see how this massive swindle was pulled off through the collusion of the economic advisers, politicians, high-flown professors of economics with scandalous and highly unethical conflicts-of-interest, investment banks, and ratings agencies. At the end of "Inside Job," Robert Gnaizda lists various groups that should be prosecuted. When asked why this has not been done, he answered: "It's a Wall Street government!" Some of the topics in the movie were covered in the FRONTLINE broadcast "Inside the Meltdown" and in the FRONTLINE broadcast "The Warning." The latter exposed how Brookley Born was sabotaged by Alan Greenspan, Robert Rubin and Larry Summers--the Troika that is directly responsible for the massive fraud perpetrated by the Wall Street crowd. It is reassuring to see that some members of Congress were competent. Senator Byron Dorgan (D. North Dakota) voted against his own party, predicting that the repeal of Glass-Steagall would lead to massive taxpayer bailouts. On 19 September 2009, Senator Dorgan was interviewed by Scott Simon on "Weekend Edition Saturday." The following is from the transcript at: <<Sen. DORGAN: Well, I mean, it does precious little to say I told you so, but this was 10 years ago on the floor of the U.S. Senate. At the time, I said I thought it was a huge mistake and, you know, I was critical of the Clinton administration and critical of the Republicans in Congress who were pushing it. But what I said is I think within a decade we're going to see massive taxpayer bailouts. I didn't necessarily know that for sure but it turns out my prognostication was a pretty expensive lesson. Because it made no sense that we should repeal Glass-Steagall and the protections that were put in place after the Great Depression. And the result of that, in my judgment, was to steer this economy into the ditch and cause a significant economic wreck that's going to take us some time to get out of. SIMON: The timing is something that intrigues me, 'cause you said this in 1999, whereas you note your party was in party. Sen. DORGAN: Uh-huh. Well, but let me just say to you that the legislation that was passed by the Congress was called Gramm-Leach-Bliley--all three Republicans. Phil Gramm--those three Republicans led the approach. It was Republican legislation but warmly embraced by President Clinton, Secretary of Treasury Rubin and so on. But I was one of eight U.S. senators that went to the floor of the Senate repeatedly in opposition to what they were doing. And, you know, as I said, I made some prognostications and say if we do this we're going to see massive taxpayer bailouts in the future. And unfortunately, that has been the case.>> "Inside Job" goes much deeper in exposing the extensive unethical conduct and shameless conflicts-of-interest of so many professors of economics, especially Frederic Mishkin, a governor at the Federal Reserve until August 2008 and now at Columbia University. According to the movie, he co-authored a fraudulent paper "The Stability of Icelandic Banks," without divulging that he had been paid $124,000 by the Iceland Chamber of Commerce to write it. In his current list of publications, he has changed the title to "The Instability ..." John Campbell, the chairman of Harvard's department of economics is left speechless--with a bewildered facial expression--when he is asked about the conflicts-of-interest of his department members. How can anyone believe anything that is published by economists? Posted on September 22, 2011 Georgann Salvant says... Everyone in America should be interested in the financial stability of the economy. Everyone regardless of political persuasion. This is NOT a political movie. Its' not Michael Moore. There is a principle in the law: "qui bono?". It means "Who benefits?". Finance and economics are complex, too complex for many of us to understand. This movie makes the complex understandable. We live in the aftermath of this. The Great Recession. The Republicans blame the Democrats, the Democrats blame the Republicans. The Tea Party blames everyone. All of these are wrong. What this movie shows is a massive conflict of interest of the people who rate the financial health of companies, even countries. What is shown is economists rating these companies for Moody's and Standard & Poors (rating agencies), who are being paid to give favorable ratings by the same companies they rate! Not just faceless nobodies, Glenn Hubbard, now the Dean of the Business School at Columbia, Frederic Mishkin, a governor at the Federal Reserve and also current the president of Harvard, when they were just economists. We see investment houses secretly shorting (betting against) the very poor quality Collateralized Debt Obligation (CDO) bonds and companies they were recommending as good investments to other clients. We are shown raters who, rather than doing their jobs and warning of financial instability, gave high investment marks to Bear Sterns and Leeman Brothers two days before they went bankrupt. And these people profited. This movie names names and actually interviews many of the people responsible for the American collapse who shamelessly ignore, lie or try to minimize their personal responsibility. Many others responsible refused to be interviewed... The movie traces these problems from the laws set up in the 1930's to prevent such conflicts of interest and start another Depression. The Glass-Steagall Act prevented Wall Street investment houses from owning FDIC insured regular banks with peoples deposits or speculating with their money to bet on the stock market. The movie shows the incestuous moral hazard nature of Wall Street regulation, weakening of financial rules under Democratic and Republican administration: Reagan, Clinton, Bush and how the laws have not been fixed under Obama! See this movie, see what's really wrong with the economy and where the money (and the jobs) went! This movie is like a nonfiction version of Wall Street II. The only possible minor criticism I could make of this movie is there is a lot of short editing of interviewee's statements. A sentence might be out of context. But I think the director probably got the real intent correct. I don't know about you, but when I put money in the stock market based on a brokers advice, I don't want to broker to go behind my back and secretly short the stock he's telling me to buy! This movie is entertaining, informative and disturbing but of vital importance to understand. You angry about the economy? Find out who you should angry at (hint: it's not who you think!) You think you are a conservative? perhaps you aren't conservative enough. Makes you wonder, where are the Weathermen, now that we need them? Posted on September 22, 2011 Eilene Pezez says... Just got home from the theater. Everyone over the age of 10 should see this film. I am old enough to remember when this all started with President Reagan. This documentary is a "call to action" for every thinking American. With the Corporate Personhood status these "so called" investment houses and banks enjoy, and the capacity to purchase any Congressperson they choose, we better wake up and follow the money. I will purchase a copy of this when it comes out and show it to everyone I know. This film connects the dots, sets the stage, and demands that as citizens we start asking the right questions and holding these people accountable. It's OUR money they are gambling with, and the consequences of their actions are going to be felt for generations. Posted on September 23, 2011 Charise Trojanowski says... Inside Job is a great documentary on an extremely important topic. It drags out a lot of hanky-panky dirty laundry and points out a lot of lies and stupidity -- and the tempers will flare of the ideologues who helped get us into the current economic crisis/mess, but so be it. It also can give the average intelligent person a foot in the door to understanding the world in which we live and the background for the financial crisis, that in my considered opinion is not yet over. In fact no end is in sight. Only the shape of the slippery slope is uncertain. I have looked into this quite a bit, and at first I thought it was going to be simply a super sort of Frontline documentary with great photography of Iceland American cities, etc. that integrated well with the interviews and narration. I think though, that in the end they did a very nice job and there was a freshness to bringing together even the many facts that have been published here and there over the last few years. I especially appreciated their preciseness about the clear warnings of the impending economic "tsunami" from respected scholars and the International Monetary Fund and European Finance Ministers and how these were brushed aside by the old-boy network of Washington and Wall Street. As they singin the Opera Evita, "When the money keeps rolling in, you don't keep books." There were more warnings than they presented in the film. I would have included those by Kevin Phillips for example. But the film had enough to make its points. I also very much appreciated that they brought out the really terrible conflicts of interest among professional academic economists at universities. They did not go deep enough for my tastes, but at least they got into it. In fact they could also have gotten into the very selective use of mathematics in academic economics, by these economics professors that get fat checks from the finances industry, in building idealistic models that can have too little to do with the real world. Instead the film focused on the cozy relationships between professors of economics, universities, and Big Money. They left out that university administrators love to see cozy relationships with business because it brings in money and connections and fame. It was very interesting to watch big faces on the big screen as they were caught in their evasions and lies. Very well practiced people!! Usually not a flicker of guilt. Though a few did at times show nervousness when they were being caught. After the film some of us discussed how it was possible that some of these culpable executives could have agreed to go on camera when they were so vulnerable. My theory is that they have gotten to where they are because they are smooth talkers. And they are egotistically self-confident that they can answer or deflect any questions. Moreover they are not used to giving interviews with media that has done its homework. In this respect I give the film makers credit for doing their homework. The film did a nice job of tracing the origins of the crisis to the deregulation policies of the Reagan administrationin the early 1980s and what became the permanent installation of Big Money ideologues and players into the highest levels of government. They could have said more about how difficult it would have been to reverse these policies and undo the networks that were brought into power. They could have said more about why banking interests were able to sell their ideologies to the American people. But one cannot include everything. There was already a lot to chew on. Posted on September 24, 2011 Tyron Lupton says... For anyone interested in knowing what caused the bottom to fall out of our financial sector and economy to the tune of trillions (shouldn't that be all of us?), Ferguson takes a complicated topic and spells it out in an intriguing, understandable and methodical way.We knew things were awry; but this really blows the lid off the deal.I don't think this is what the Founding Fathers had in mind...a billion-dollar cabal with club members including the upper echelons of Wall St, Washington and academia. Nice blend of Matt Damon's narration and the interviews.Definitely riveting...and troubling.Even distressing and disturbing for those who have suffered as a result of the financial collapse. Unlike many documentaries that conclude with some specific 'calls for action', "Inside Job" leave viewers awestruck and without a laundry list of what to do or who to call.In any case, very well done and highly recommended. Also, keep an eye on the large and impressive list of those who declined to be interviewed. Their silence was deafening. Posted on September 25, 2011 Leave a Comment |
