Margin Call - "Sell it all. Today." 👆🤘👆

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  • čas přidán 30. 03. 2021
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    "Margin Call" is a very underappreciated movie IMO. The movie is starred by Stanley Tucci and Kevin Spacey. There are a lot of parallels between this movie and what happened last Friday with the unwinding of Archegos Capital Management's positions by Goldman Sachs and others.
    No idea why I started thinking about it on Friday 26th March 2021 but its a lot what Goldman Sachs did when it liquidated $10.5 Billion in Stocks in Block Trade Spree. The bank sold $6.6 billion worth of shares of Baidu Inc, Tencent Music Entertainment Group and Vipshop Holdings Ltd, before the US market opened on Friday. Following this, Goldman sold $3.9 billion worth of shares in ViacomCBS Inc, Discovery Inc, Farfetch Ltd , iQIYI Inc and GSX Techedu Inc, according to the report.
    Deutsche Bank AG dodged this bullet (mimicking Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and others) by a swift
    disposal of $4 billion of available-for-sale collateral from its prime brokerage exposure to Hwang. Credit Suisse Group AG and Nomura Holdings Inc. were less fortunate. The collateral they hold
    may now both be much lower in value and less liquid, taking much longer to offload, with commensurate larger losses. While there were reported attempts to broker a club deal on
    Archegos and to undertake a collective controlled explosion of the positions, trust among the investment bankers was absent. It became devil take the hindmost.
    We already know that Credit Suisse took the brunt of this though. The reporting overall on this has been pretty thin given the fact that one family office going belly up pretty much rocked five gigantic financial service brokerage firms? And disrupted the trading of how many companies? Really a larger point that is apparently being missing - Goldman, Morgan Stanley, et al. did NOT have better risk management in place. They were all on the Titanic - GS and MS simply jumped in the lifeboats more quickly.
    1) Controversial, but upon reflection I would put this entire speech up against any speech from "Wall Street."
    2) "So you are a rocket scientist....Maybe you could tell me what is going on. And please, speak as you might to a young child. Or a golden retriever. It wasn't brains that brought me here; I assure you that."
    3) "Do you care to know why I'm in this chair with you all? I mean, why I earn the big bucks...I'm here for one reason and one reason alone. I'm here to guess what the music might do a week, a month, a year from now. That's it. Nothing more...."
    4) "...And standing here tonight, I'm afraid that I don't hear - a - thing. Just... silence."
    Just so good.
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Komentáře • 4,6K

  • @AlexAminoff
    @AlexAminoff Před 2 lety +6447

    I showed this clip to my golden retriever, now he’s managing my portfolio

  • @kurtwillig4230
    @kurtwillig4230 Před 24 dny +270

    Like 12 Angry Men, just guys in a room talking. No CGI, no romance angle, no music, just pure acting. Love it.

    • @michaelblaes9847
      @michaelblaes9847 Před 19 dny +1

      I don't know if it's 12 angry men good. But it's a really good scene. I can reel Kevin Spacey's reluctance. Apparently something that is entirely fictional for him in any circumstance.

    • @00Daddy
      @00Daddy Před 19 dny

      Pure "Men" And masculine

    • @psyo123
      @psyo123 Před 7 dny

      all we want is truth about what happened at that time

  • @Roccofan
    @Roccofan Před rokem +810

    I love the way the Jeremy Irons character feigns ignorance at the beginning, but by the end we realize that he understands, and has understood deeply for quite some time.

  • @cmhavner
    @cmhavner Před 7 měsíci +957

    “Carmelo get me Eric Dale here by 6: 30.” “It’s done.” Most of the movie is wondering where that guy is and all Tuld had to do was unleash one bloodhound. That, my friends, is terrifying power.

  • @apierre6
    @apierre6 Před 2 lety +14686

    The most realistic part about this entire scene is got an analyst/associate spent hours putting a deck together and no one even opened it. Anyone who's worked in financial services knows this feeling.

    • @RedWinePlease
      @RedWinePlease Před 2 lety +492

      In part, it's the fear of being the messenger that gets killed for the bad news. Better to let your boss deliver it. The boss will want the report to be vetted among peers and other experts, then, and only then, does it get raised up the flagpole.

    • @ralphmacchiato3761
      @ralphmacchiato3761 Před 2 lety +484

      Legwork needs to be done no matter what. Acting upon it by faith in the chain of command is the sign of a well oiled machine.

    • @darthvader5300
      @darthvader5300 Před 2 lety +340

      @@ralphmacchiato3761 Never blame capitalism, blame the people who mismanaged capitalism. FDR did not say that but his actions speaks louder than words for he saved capitalism for capitalism. When people say 'capitalism doesn't work', what they really mean is 'We've distorted capitalism with a bunch of regulations that don't work, so let's give up on it and switch to something that has never once worked'. The regulatory system of FDR just worked fine until it was abused and misused by the leftists and progressives to the point it allowed the opposition to de-regulate America that destroyed the very safety mechanism that prevented the negative side of capitalism to overwhelm the positive side of capitalism. The purpose of FDR's regulatory policies is quite simple, prevent the abuse of capitalism and prevent the misuse of it's powers. It is because of FDR's regulatory policies you have the 1950s and 1960s economic miracle and then in the late 1960s you started ripping it apart! In the 1970s , a wave of young liberals. Bill Clinton among them, destroyed the populist Democratic Party they had inherited from the New Dealers of the 1930s. The contours of this ideological fight were complex, but the gist was: Before the 70s, the Democrats were suspicious of big business. They used anti-monopoly policies to fight oligarchy and financial manipulation. Creating competition in open markets, breaking up concentrations of private power, and protecting labor and farmer rights were understood as the essence of ensuring that our commercial society was democratic and protected from big money.

    • @tomallencn
      @tomallencn Před 2 lety +280

      As a analyst that puts decks together for a living, can confirm.

    • @iorekby
      @iorekby Před 2 lety +378

      It's a good running joke in the movie. The higher up the food chain this goes, the more simplified Peter has to make the explanation and the longer it takes for people to grasp what's happening lol.

  • @fiachramaccana280
    @fiachramaccana280 Před 2 lety +2638

    I was a broker for 32 years. This movie gave me a panic attack. Praise doesnt come higher.

    • @casualguy393
      @casualguy393 Před rokem +98

      I don't even invest and this scene has confirmed the reason why I don't. I have just enough knowledge to be ignorant and this scene shows just how ignorant and bad of an investor I really am.
      Sales guy: "Hey, you wanna put $200 on Apple stock?"
      Me: "Are you out of your frigging mind? I don't wanna lose my house and bike."

  • @nighle160
    @nighle160 Před 7 měsíci +332

    Loves how John looks around to make sure nobody intimidates the analyst.

  • @rjm789
    @rjm789 Před 11 měsíci +333

    Another day, another viewing of this scene…

  • @hlynnkeith9334
    @hlynnkeith9334 Před 2 lety +2969

    This is Jeremy Irons first appearance in the movie, and he walks in and takes over the picture.

    • @KaiKalt
      @KaiKalt Před 2 lety +109

      Yes. And every other actor knew it too

    • @jeremijakrstic1968
      @jeremijakrstic1968 Před 2 lety +128

      The best part is seeing Kevin Spacey's face while Irons is acting. It's 100% pure admiration. You don't see that too often. Especially when it comes to people like Spacey, who's a prick to work with, one of the greatest actors at the same time.

    • @bigbob1699
      @bigbob1699 Před 2 lety +24

      @Nadia Brooks It is called talent , experience , and understanding the part .

    • @MarsFKA
      @MarsFKA Před 2 lety +38

      @Nadia Brooks Yet a good script still needs the actors - and Director - to make it work. I haven't seen any more of this movie than what is in these few CZcams clips, but the quality in just this clip is colossal.

    • @kevinlim806
      @kevinlim806 Před 2 lety

      @@MarsFKA I agree

  • @MichaelMiller-bs3tz
    @MichaelMiller-bs3tz Před 2 lety +3328

    I consider this film to be part of a Trilogy.
    Margin Call - The traders perspective
    The Big Short - Banking, investor, hedgefund perspective
    Too Big to Fail - Government perspective
    All great films.

    • @kennyliverpool8842
      @kennyliverpool8842 Před rokem +6

      🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼

    • @atorres11720
      @atorres11720 Před rokem +4

      Thanks.

    • @FinanceVector
      @FinanceVector Před rokem +27

      You got that list perfect. I should watch this in a row one day!

    • @Clickbait86
      @Clickbait86 Před rokem +30

      Boiler room > to big to fail

    • @bboyrobotic6696
      @bboyrobotic6696 Před rokem +5

      Thank you. I’m happy I seen your comment because after this scene it made me want to watch the movie and wish that had others from different perspectives now your comment gave me that. Very much appreciated 🙏🏽🤘🏽

  • @iR3vil4te
    @iR3vil4te Před 3 měsíci +150

    I love how he immediately cuts through all those senior managers, board members, etc etc… and speaks straight with the guy smart enough to see the bigger picture, no matter how ‘junior’ he is. There’s a level of insight they’re both on that supersedes everything else. Love it.

  • @goshaid
    @goshaid Před rokem +87

    the subtle 'STFU' side look at 3:46... jeremy irons is a genius

  • @adamm2091
    @adamm2091 Před 2 lety +1003

    "Speak as you might a young child, or a golden retriever"
    I use this line now lmao

    • @edwardjewell8793
      @edwardjewell8793 Před 2 lety +31

      I do this whenever I get pulled over by the Police....

    • @steren700
      @steren700 Před 2 lety +19

      I have actually used this line, stoping at "small child" and gets the job done...it implies humility as you dont look like a know It all, that needs to be explained. Yet, It also entails authority, as you get to make that request without being moked AND people need to bend over to be clear enough...

    • @MagnusAnand
      @MagnusAnand Před 2 lety

      Me too!!

    • @EnoVarma
      @EnoVarma Před 2 lety +5

      I think a variation of this line was first used by John Grisham in the novel "A Time To A Kill". Matthew McConaghey spoke it in the film: "Explain it to me like I was a five-year-old".

    • @Sakhmeov
      @Sakhmeov Před 2 lety +3

      @@steren700 It's one of the most terrifying and effective lines I could think of. Because the implication of "It wasn't brains that got me here, I can assure you of that", is of course, "Well then what was it?" And the answer is, of course, a double-edged sword, in how it might jibe with the person being spoken to themselves; Unrepressed and irrepressible ruthlessness, in all likelihood.
      The problem to me, is that he's saying this to Peter. Who is, as mentioned earlier, an actual rocket scientist. The kind of guy who, frankly, isn't likely to respect either dismissal of intelligence, nor the willingness to just do ruthlessness as he can see what problems this might lead to...

  • @Gigantor69
    @Gigantor69 Před 3 lety +4775

    Irons absolutely kills this scene. He is the embodiment of a high level, powerful executive.

    • @kokolasticot304
      @kokolasticot304 Před 3 lety +193

      You misspelled crook

    • @LJamesStudios
      @LJamesStudios Před 3 lety +284

      They’re a lot meaner in real life unfortunately

    • @justme-yr2xf
      @justme-yr2xf Před 3 lety +2

      #ironicnineironchipincharge

    • @elyastoohey6621
      @elyastoohey6621 Před 3 lety +154

      @@LJamesStudios yep. The one thing this board room doesn’t show. Albeit it would ruin normal people’s idea of what a big bank/funds board room acts like, is that half the guys in the room are ultra aggressive.
      It makes sense. You want to be the top of the pile, taking home tens of millions in bonuses and then with a golden parachute/handshake, you’re going to leave with a net worth of likely $100 million +, you need to be the “best”
      12-16 hour days as fairly standard.
      And everyone in the room has an iq of a minimum of 115.
      Standard would be 125, very bright.
      That boss will likely be mean. Abusive. Demanding.
      Jeremy irons is so cool. But he plays the stereotype of what we think a top executive is.
      This ultra confident man of few but precise words.
      It’s a character.
      Albeit you can feel the reference in the room. They know the hierarchy.

    • @larzkruber822
      @larzkruber822 Před 3 lety +21

      Nearly as good as his acting in dungeons&dragons

  • @RichardPosadas
    @RichardPosadas Před 3 měsíci +314

    Jeremy Iron’s hand gestures, the right hand most of the time. Pure genius at work.

  • @retheisen
    @retheisen Před 6 měsíci +401

    I hate how Kevin Spacey took Kevin Spacey from us.

  • @PeteSinHouston
    @PeteSinHouston Před 2 lety +681

    “Carmello, get me Eric Dale”
    “It’s done”
    Every serious company needs reliable muscle.

    • @davidjames1684
      @davidjames1684 Před 2 lety +12

      How would he know "it is done". Maybe Eric Dale was nowhere to be found or went far away like to get away from that company, this making it impossible to get him back in that short amount of time.

    • @stephen2583
      @stephen2583 Před 2 lety +8

      pretty sure he doesnt get him though.

    • @ggglavezzoli
      @ggglavezzoli Před 2 lety +121

      @@davidjames1684 Apparently you don't know Carmelo.

    • @willowandluka5302
      @willowandluka5302 Před 2 lety +12

      Carmelo is gonna go places

    • @juliofranciscogomezstoppel1860
      @juliofranciscogomezstoppel1860 Před 2 lety +73

      @@davidjames1684 A company owning thousands of millions of dollars can get anyone anywhere anytime, allways. When the entire survival of a company that big is on the line, you will get him even if he went to mars, for yesterday. If the entire economy of the biggest country ever is at risk, he will be escorted by the ninja turtles if needed.

  • @top2pear
    @top2pear Před 2 lety +4944

    Sadly, Margin Call falls in the category of "Classic Movie Nobody Has Seen". Excellent cast at the top of their game. Great writing. No nonsense "smart" movie that delivers from beginning to end. One of the top 20 of the last 20 years for me.

    • @galeej
      @galeej Před 2 lety +119

      Yeah.. likely because no one understood the movie when it came out...

    • @raymeester7883
      @raymeester7883 Před 2 lety +44

      Sad but True.
      I liked Company Men but it had a few faults.
      This movie was astounding.

    • @mf5202
      @mf5202 Před 2 lety +55

      1) Dumb people like dumb movies 2) Smarter people sometimes want to escape from their smart life. So let's see Avatar or The Avengers. The movie was too smart and lacked character development, with the exception of Spacey's character. Having a few scenes with Jeremy Irons getting woken up and helicoptering in, or Zach Quinto in a s*hole apartment, or Demi Moore with her lesbian supermodel gf, or Tucci breaking the news to his family would have added a lot to the movie. Great potential. Another one is "Things to do in Denver when You're Dead".

    • @robertburton8055
      @robertburton8055 Před 2 lety +25

      Meh this movie is just sort of boring and most people aren’t into finance enough to hardly even care about what’s going on.
      I’m really really into finance and I love a lot of these actors and I still only watched this movie once.

    • @totoroid
      @totoroid Před 2 lety +22

      @@mf5202 I don't we're smarter just for liking dialogue over high action volume...This was just a low budget high quality set that got unlucky with marketing I guess

  • @dce5323
    @dce5323 Před rokem +335

    The way he flicks the paper two or three extra times after he says it wasn’t brains that got him there. The half beat and the smile just hinting at curdling. Every minute is so excellent.

  • @dw8477
    @dw8477 Před rokem +435

    The glance Irons gives to the others as he tells Sullivan 'you're speaking to me' is so subtle yet crucial. So many aspects of his character and this meeting I have seen over time.

  • @allenjpl
    @allenjpl Před 2 lety +1637

    "You will never sell to any of those people ever again." Sam is concerned the people will never be willing to deal with the firm again. John, the CEO, recognizes that nearly everyone who buys today will never be in a position to purchase again because they'll be wiped out.

    • @buraktepe6683
      @buraktepe6683 Před rokem

      Actually, Buyers are alive coz they got peercantages. The Ceo concern the company. Because if they dont sell it. There will be no company anymore. And Ceo might be sleep on streets.

    • @damnson2235
      @damnson2235 Před rokem +77

      Yes, but most of the people working there will be working somewhere else after that.

    • @kevinohare9216
      @kevinohare9216 Před rokem +210

      As much as I've watched this scene, dozens of times, that hadn't occurred to me. In a nutshell, Sam is focused on the relationships which will be irrevocably broken, while Tuld knows that it won't matter because they'll be bankrupt anyway. True to their respective natures. Thanks for pointing that out.

    • @rc....
      @rc.... Před rokem +73

      Doesn't matter if they can't sell again, that is still an IF, but if they didn't sell crap to willing be buyers, they definitely will not be able to survive to explore any possible "if" in the future

    • @mikecarroll3538
      @mikecarroll3538 Před rokem +53

      Some of those people may be wiped out yes, but it’s also the fact that a few years post crash he knows people will get greedy and the music as he puts it will start back up again and those greedy people will forget how they screwed them over.

  • @kpwand
    @kpwand Před 2 lety +2619

    Jeremy Irons deserved an Oscar for this performance. With the aid of some excellent writing and directing, Irons superbly locates the beats between the lines. In less than 9 minutes his character charms, self-deprecates, placates, condescends, lectures, boasts, scolds, instructs, justifies, warns, commands, and cajoles. This is combined with his subtle body language, which is mostly open and free (occasionally betraying his true emotional state) until he finally draws a closed, defensive position and utters the words: "so that we may survive". A masterclass performance for the ages.

    • @chriswilkes4350
      @chriswilkes4350 Před rokem +47

      Nicely written.

    • @TaylorTrask
      @TaylorTrask Před rokem +32

      I wish more people recognized this

    • @indigogolf3051
      @indigogolf3051 Před rokem +45

      I absolutely agree. This is a masterclass of acting and in no small part thanks to excellent script-writing. I watch this clip over and over, whatever the reality of how this would have played out in the real world, it's still hugely compelling. I would give him an Oscar for this clip alone. By the way I can't even add to your list of adjectives - fully covered, I think, and something I hadn't noticed..

    • @marklaechel4537
      @marklaechel4537 Před rokem +46

      Man you nailed that right on the head. The acting in this movie is just amazing. Say what you want about Kevin Spacey's personal life, but wow, this guy on lens is one of the best. Paul B., Jeremy Irons, amazing.

    • @robertbrandywine
      @robertbrandywine Před rokem +3

      @@marklaechel4537 I felt most of the actors in that scene did good work, not just sitting stiffly when the focus wasn't on them. but reacting as real people in such a meeting would.

  • @johnbradley-iy3gp
    @johnbradley-iy3gp Před 12 dny +4

    My favourite is Ramesh. Tuld doesn't even need to ask him a proper question yet he gives a simple, concise, down to earth answer with great ease. That's a power of legal brain there, sitting at Tuld's left hand. Tuld trusts him. Ramesh has proven himself over many years to sit there. Basically Ramesh is Carmello with a law degree so he makes proper big bucks and gets a big seat at the big table. I wish they had done more with Ramesh - like him holding the elavator switch to stop the FBI getting up to the 29th floor or whatever! Well done Ramesh!

  • @intraum
    @intraum Před rokem +525

    Jeremy Irons (as usual) absolutely crushed this scene. just the perfect amount of professionalism and cold-blooded evil that you expect from a CEO

  • @shaunpatrick8345
    @shaunpatrick8345 Před 3 lety +1676

    - Speak to me as you would a small child or a golden retriever
    - Who's a good girl? Are you a good girl? Go find the toxic debt, I'll give you a treat

    • @thesoultwins72
      @thesoultwins72 Před 3 lety +21

      Shaun Patrick O'Jameson.......everything you need to know about making a business presentation [to 'C-suites'] is contained in this brief extract. It covers the 3 essential elements perfectly.

    • @marlc4319
      @marlc4319 Před 3 lety +7

      hahaha

    • @jackhoff529
      @jackhoff529 Před 3 lety +32

      Really that line was basically "simplify it so the audience watching will understand"

    • @honor9lite1337
      @honor9lite1337 Před 3 lety +6

      @@thesoultwins72 what's the 3 essential element exactly??

    • @alecapin
      @alecapin Před 3 lety +5

      @@honor9lite1337, the good stripper girl, the toxic debt, and the treat.

  • @bt10ant
    @bt10ant Před 3 lety +1943

    Good example that a film containing no CGI or special effects -- just good acting -- can carry a story so well. I miss these kinds of movies.

    • @Box52222
      @Box52222 Před 3 lety +30

      I still think some CGI would’ve been nice

    • @navyblue12
      @navyblue12 Před 3 lety +8

      So so true...

    • @MrMarcusIndia
      @MrMarcusIndia Před 3 lety +65

      It's an excellent film. More explosions would have made it better though.

    • @palalajec
      @palalajec Před 3 lety +9

      these kind of movies are not going anywhere ... there will always be some new good movies without CGI

    • @Barrybeastmode
      @Barrybeastmode Před 3 lety +27

      These kinds of movies are made all the time. What are you talking about?

  • @moniqrupley6019
    @moniqrupley6019 Před rokem +298

    Zachary Quinto knocks it out of the park in this scene. Goes toe to toe with all these acting heavyweights. This is such an underrated flick and Stanley Tucci and Paul Bettany in particular are outstanding.

  • @TheECuse
    @TheECuse Před rokem +83

    The scale of this sort of companies operation is what astounds me as well. They discovered the issue around midnight, had upper management in a room strategizing by 2am and had the ceo and board of directors flown in by helicopter only a few hours later. Not to mention, fresh coffee, breakfast and information packets stapled together for everyone just in time for the meeting. The meeting itself probobly cost $500k

  • @noeldown1952
    @noeldown1952 Před 3 lety +1748

    Just for a moment, take in the cast acting in a low budget movie. Jeremy Irons, Kevin Spacey, Zachary Quinto, Paul Bettany, Simon Baker, Demi Moore, Al Sapienza, and off-screen - Stanley Tucci. That's a mind-blowing amount of talent in one room.

    • @nafnaf0
      @nafnaf0 Před 3 lety +78

      This is such a great scene, one of my favorites of all time

    • @zafarsobhan9191
      @zafarsobhan9191 Před 3 lety +33

      Aasif Mandvi too

    • @farje1
      @farje1 Před 3 lety +63

      Jeremy Irons looks intimidating and puzzled at the same time. It's mesmerising.

    • @MojaveDan
      @MojaveDan Před 3 lety +66

      Also consider even with all the talent in that room Jeremy Irons enters in the middle of the movie and completely takes it over.

    • @krt88nc
      @krt88nc Před 3 lety +41

      3.5 million budget, how did they do that?

  • @Snoogen11
    @Snoogen11 Před 3 lety +884

    I loved it when he says "you're talking to me, mr Sullivan" what he is actually saying is: "I'm the only one in this room that makes the decisions, so you only need to explain it to me, everyone else in this room is irrelevant".

    • @johnnypastrana6727
      @johnnypastrana6727 Před 2 lety +137

      Sullivan saw some other bosses looking at him and felt intimidated for a second and Irons reassured him that it would be okay to tell it to him straight with no holding back.

    • @ront0803
      @ront0803 Před 2 lety +27

      @@johnnypastrana6727 Interesting! My take was that he was shooting a quick dart at Cohen, who may have had the slightest body language to try and cue Sullivan's response.

    • @vstev86
      @vstev86 Před 2 lety +39

      "you're speaking with me" because the ones you're looking at and nervous to speak in front of are history

    • @michaelblazin4093
      @michaelblazin4093 Před 2 lety +31

      @@ront0803 Cohen is Irons’ man and was the one that alerted him. Irons makes clear the connection. Spacey’s connection is from tenure, not choice. The two discussed what they would do before the meeting, before Irons got on the chopper. Do you think Cohen created the plan in an hour as depicted? He had his staff, undoubtedly huge, working on it the minute Irons agreed on action in the initial call. They also likely discussed the key players and pressure points. BTW, Carmelo’s goons were already hard at work looking for Tucci before Irons boarded the chopper, probably cell phone trace via NYPD connections.
      The management committee meeting was a show for the managers to make clear the danger and need for action. Firms need shows too to get the message across.

    • @its_clean
      @its_clean Před 2 lety +30

      @@michaelblazin4093 I'm glad you pointed this out because it doesn't look like anyone else has. Irons's mind was already made up before he walked into the room, decisions were already made, plans were already in action. The meeting was pro forma to allow things to be spoken out loud, and for him to make universally clear why he was doing the things that were about to happen. Irons already knew what Zachary Quinto was going to say before he answered his questions. It was, as you said, for show.

  • @user-us6on7qs6k
    @user-us6on7qs6k Před 3 měsíci +10

    When Carmelo says “It’s done” it is the answer that every leader wants.

  • @Feyd01
    @Feyd01 Před rokem +309

    People often overlook the brilliant photography of this scene as well. The use of depth of field, the irksomeness of crossing the line repeatedly, the big space in frame given to the CEO, the small room given to everyone else, unless the CEO allows them the space. It's beautifully executed. Just like the scene, it is largely calm, yet there is a volcano about to erupt underneath their feet.

  • @stumac869
    @stumac869 Před 3 lety +1706

    This has to be one of the most convincing movie depictions of a high level meeting following the sh*t hitting the fan. The facial expressions and eye movements along with the dialogue are perfection.

    • @satanicaleve
      @satanicaleve Před 3 lety +37

      The Big Short is also another great film made around this time in regards to the housing market and the Great Recession
      that occurred between 2007 to 2009

    • @JohnnyBGood11
      @JohnnyBGood11 Před 3 lety +27

      And we get to see it again in real life and it's happening right now...the Fed is going to try like hell to stop the crash.

    • @grast5150
      @grast5150 Před 3 lety +47

      I have been in meeting like this before. Very similar to the meeting Colonial had when their systems were ransom wared. Trying to explain to the CEO that restoration of service is going to take weeks not hours and the reason why is because the guy sitting next to him (CIO) though the cost of actual Disaster Recovery was too high and thus only funded a half measure. As Stu said, the eye movements and shifting in the chairs, and the tenseness is just perfectly presented.

    • @grast5150
      @grast5150 Před 3 lety +28

      @@JohnnyBGood11 Well that is what happens when you shut down an economy for a year and print Trillions of funny money. Then the American people fire the only person Business's trusted to get them out of this situation and replace with a senile old man. Now think about what our 401ks and investments are going to look like in the next 2 years? We all need to be in for the long haul because this is not going to recover quickly and only safe bet is maintain your position and hope for the best.

    • @iorekby
      @iorekby Před 2 lety +41

      @@satanicaleve The Big Short was the Fisher-Price Baby's first book of the '08 recession. It was decent, but for me Margin Call is on another level. It's a serious movie about a serious subject and ironically enough, doesn't treat the audience like they are a small child or a golden retriever.

  • @Whoopdido777
    @Whoopdido777 Před 3 lety +1282

    His line about about brains not getting him there was great. He gave a little smirk as he said it. He’s obviously extremely intelligent, but the the REAL reason he got where he is was a combination of being both ruthless to an extent when he had to be and also surrounding himself with people who actually are smarter than he is.

    • @Dunning-Krugereffect
      @Dunning-Krugereffect Před 3 lety +22

      I was about about about to say that.

    • @kaziahmed1424
      @kaziahmed1424 Před 3 lety +46

      The reason he is rich is because the character is basically a glorified crook who did all he could to decimate the world market

    • @izzad777
      @izzad777 Před 3 lety +29

      Tywin Lannister all the way. God I missed that show when it was good.

    • @Newber92
      @Newber92 Před 3 lety +42

      The definition of leadership. Too many higher ups think they must have all the answers and many times over act to compensate.

    • @Mourtzouphlos240
      @Mourtzouphlos240 Před 3 lety +7

      Also he made the right connections.

  • @RustyCas999
    @RustyCas999 Před 29 dny +20

    Carmelo is the guy you realllly don’t want to mess with.

  • @alexanderkim4889
    @alexanderkim4889 Před rokem +118

    The decision to hold the camera on Jeremy Irons for just a single second longer at 3:45 is one of those small things that make this movie so good. The CEO is watching the other execs and maybe even glaring at them. It is a look that speaks to what he is thinking and feeling about those people without him actually saying a single word to them.

  • @wescobb8071
    @wescobb8071 Před 2 lety +622

    Imagine getting called in for a 3am meeting only to not say a word, like 2/3 of the people in the room lol

    • @aeroAdvocate
      @aeroAdvocate Před 2 lety +18

      There might still be a vote of some kind if you decide to wind down part of the business. In any case they just have to be present for legal reasons.

    • @mihaa94sky
      @mihaa94sky Před 2 lety +31

      @@avae5343 I swear I could watch this scene prolongued for hours. It's so good.

    • @speakingtruths4215
      @speakingtruths4215 Před 2 lety +41

      Probably better than being called into a meeting at 3 am and be expected to explain all of this, right?

    • @lamidikolawole218
      @lamidikolawole218 Před 2 lety +13

      You know what’s worse? Having to deliver the bad news to the boss of your boss.

    • @grease8922
      @grease8922 Před 2 lety +1

      and you're not even fell asleep at all! whoaaaa!

  • @jrqberry
    @jrqberry Před 2 lety +2717

    Such a good example of Executive management. He gives the "lower" ranked person respect and listens openly, then turns to the other bosses and expects answers. Love it.

    • @chuco915C
      @chuco915C Před rokem +12

      Can you elaborate on this?

    • @dlysele
      @dlysele Před rokem +220

      Most of the time are the guys down below who knows all the details. But you wouldn’t expect them to know what to do, that’s what the exec team is for.

    • @khaeld091
      @khaeld091 Před rokem +30

      always happen the executive cannot blame the associate but the manager. I dont know why it is like that. I've experience it.

    • @chtomlin
      @chtomlin Před rokem +25

      I think you mean an example of "good exec management" , but only if he takes care of that associate and doesn't leave him out to dry after drawing him out. What I normally see of institutions is that they hold the lower levels to a much higher standard than the higher levels at least from what is visible. They higher ups may get a stern tongue lashing, but rarely the demotion they deserve, but lowers will often just be removed entirely.

    • @jcolinmizia9161
      @jcolinmizia9161 Před rokem +14

      It’s the corporate structure: the lower employees do the work, while the higher up figure out how to make decisions based on that work.

  • @196cupcake
    @196cupcake Před 8 měsíci +7

    When your boss is like "explain it to me like I'm a dumb child," you know shit just got real.

  • @mattturner7531
    @mattturner7531 Před 11 měsíci +85

    For an analyst, an engineer, a numbers guy, he's fantastic at explaining a relatively complex risk management problem to a group of seasoned (but probably not fluent on the current situation) high management individuals.

  • @FuzzyDan
    @FuzzyDan Před 2 lety +1182

    The random guy who stands up and Jeremy Irons takes a moment to veer over and shake his hand when he enters the room is one of those small acting/directing touches I love. I can't pinpoint the why, but it makes the scene real for me.

    • @1516Spinola6040
      @1516Spinola6040 Před rokem +51

      I still wonder who that person is.

    • @jessedaughtry4433
      @jessedaughtry4433 Před rokem +232

      Older guy, probably go back along ways but it is a touch of realism that people notice

    • @faridabaouiurbano5823
      @faridabaouiurbano5823 Před rokem +30

      Hero comment

    • @matthewsawczyn6592
      @matthewsawczyn6592 Před rokem +132

      @@jessedaughtry4433 Exactly. Some older member of the board that Jeremy Irons' character feels grateful made it out, and shows him that respect

    • @Jinka1950
      @Jinka1950 Před rokem +46

      You are so right and mr. Irons body language towards that man is sterling.

  • @SamBrickell
    @SamBrickell Před 3 lety +1593

    *JI:* "Do you know why I'm in this chair?"
    *Me:* "Because you killed Mufasa."
    ...
    *JI:* "Precisely!"

  • @KingDeuces22
    @KingDeuces22 Před 3 měsíci +43

    Probably my favorite scene in a film. The way he says silence is just a fantastic delivery. Kudos.

  • @kroon275
    @kroon275 Před 8 měsíci +19

    What a powerhouse performance from Irons.
    At one point I was sure Spacey was looking over at him not so much reacting in character but reacting in admiration of a fellow actor

  • @cheflev9884
    @cheflev9884 Před 3 lety +702

    I love that there is no music in this scene. It’s just their voices, movements, and Jeremy Irons flipping the corner of the report

    • @mskcrc
      @mskcrc Před 3 lety +6

      Extradiegetic music is what it's called. It's often used as a crutch by poor filmmakers to inject emotion into a scene. Although this is not a perfect or even "great" movie, I appreciate that the director trusted his actors enough to imbue the scene with drama.

    • @jayo3074
      @jayo3074 Před 3 lety +1

      Why would there be music anyway

    • @trikstari7687
      @trikstari7687 Před 2 lety +16

      It also adds to the analogy of the music having stopped.

    • @benjaminelsbury683
      @benjaminelsbury683 Před 2 lety +12

      There is no music because the CEO Stated that that music has stopped and he does not hear a sound. Good call Chef

    • @PhillipSyrios
      @PhillipSyrios Před 2 lety

      Is there any music in this movie that isn’t also heard by the characters? I haven’t seen it in awhile but I don’t remember any.

  • @FACELOWNER
    @FACELOWNER Před 2 lety +1680

    Can someone please explain why I comeback every month or so to watch this clip and find it just as amazing as every time I've watched it before.? I don't think I will ever get bored of watching this master piece.

    • @Dogen70
      @Dogen70 Před 2 lety +21

      Im about to watch it again. Jeremy, I call him Jeremy, came into the bar one night filming in ATL. I was going to tell him I always thought he should have been Magneto in the Xmen movies. He was playing pool. I did walk up to my bud, Jeremy and told him that. Hes a tall dude. He looked at me liked he looked at Quinto and I went back to my chair. I was proud I told Jeremy what I thought. The end

    • @paulowczarczak4363
      @paulowczarczak4363 Před 2 lety

      Exactly

    • @fuzzygolf8497
      @fuzzygolf8497 Před 2 lety +5

      Haha, i do the same every so often

    • @lewis9702
      @lewis9702 Před 2 lety +20

      I've been in a couple of these types of meetings (although I was never close to being a CEO, and they were never this dire), and this scene perfectly captures the tension and anxiety present in the room.

    • @thejamesasher
      @thejamesasher Před 2 lety +7

      im guessing you watch the princess bride swordfight too. if so, you are right for doing that lol.

  • @mohamedelmessery6661
    @mohamedelmessery6661 Před rokem +8

    No music... No nudity... Just incredible writing skills and acting

  • @user-xr4bm5qh1l
    @user-xr4bm5qh1l Před 2 měsíci +40

    I was a Bond's Trader and an Oil Trader for 27 years. The Friday meetings for me at least probably took several years off my life. No amount of money could replace that, but the High I received when WE killed it was amazing! Those weeks where WE lost Big still haunt me 13 years after retirement.

  • @sahumullasaud4837
    @sahumullasaud4837 Před 2 lety +515

    His subtle body language when he says it wasn't brains that got him there is beautifully done. The scary smile and the flippant page thumbing shows he knows his power is being ruthless and in no small way a genius at his game.

    • @martinXY
      @martinXY Před 2 lety +28

      Yes. Not brains, not good looks, just a ruthless business-sense. The page thumbing is brilliant. He finishes telling Mr Sullivan to speak in very simple terms to him (like he's not very bright) but the insistent page thumbing sets the pace for how quickly it should happen.

    • @Chris.starfleet
      @Chris.starfleet Před 2 lety +14

      That smile is called a tiger smile.

  • @billhickswasgreat3421
    @billhickswasgreat3421 Před 3 lety +1307

    "Sell it all. Today." - Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, about the Archegos portfolio, probably :)

    • @yohjijames1413
      @yohjijames1413 Před 3 lety +78

      Whereas Nomura probably scheduled their meeting for midday, made a decision by 5pm and acted on it the day after

    • @Mark-tb1zq
      @Mark-tb1zq Před 3 lety +15

      Spot on.

    • @godzillamothra5983
      @godzillamothra5983 Před 3 lety +25

      @@yohjijames1413
      LOL, Nomura was left holding the stinky bag

    • @crimony3054
      @crimony3054 Před 3 lety +32

      They believed selling was the correct move, but there were others just as skilled who believed that buying, especially at a discount, was the right move.

    • @blackbbbbiochip
      @blackbbbbiochip Před 3 lety +3

      My god xd;...

  • @donholt3361
    @donholt3361 Před rokem +23

    If you read the original script- the genius of how Jeremy Irons phrases his lines and adapts them for maximal effect is made clear- utterly brilliant

  • @cavale89
    @cavale89 Před 2 měsíci +8

    8:11 this whole exchange is so well written and acted.
    8:39 increasing tension
    8:47 peak perfect line deliver

  • @bilalc4415
    @bilalc4415 Před 3 lety +573

    I showed this to my golden retriever. She actually did get it! Great job, Spock!!

    • @foesfly3047
      @foesfly3047 Před 3 lety +8

      Hahahahaha!

    • @FutureDeep
      @FutureDeep Před 3 lety +6

      His name is Sylar

    • @gon4455
      @gon4455 Před 3 lety +3

      Wof Wof wof

    • @ace7467
      @ace7467 Před 3 lety +2

      😂😂

    • @timdowney6721
      @timdowney6721 Před 3 lety +9

      My Lab had gotten out of the position weeks ago. She lapped up the spilt milk, too.

  • @mikescarborough9196
    @mikescarborough9196 Před 3 lety +677

    The acting in this movie is off the hook good, and I wish there were more movies in the business drama genre.

    • @spacemonster8954
      @spacemonster8954 Před 3 lety +23

      Jobs, The social network, wolves of wallstreet, the big short

    • @YesPlease1
      @YesPlease1 Před 3 lety +19

      Glengarry Glen Ross

    • @jdstarek
      @jdstarek Před 3 lety +6

      Boiler room, Glengary Glenn Ross,

    • @siddharthbirdi
      @siddharthbirdi Před 3 lety +12

      @@spacemonster8954 They are a bit more dramatized

    • @PatrickBandy
      @PatrickBandy Před 3 lety +2

      Funny to run into a fellow KSU Owl round here! Hooty hoo!\

  • @MrUsnavyvet
    @MrUsnavyvet Před rokem +13

    Now, this is what great acting is!! No background music; just dramatic dialogue. This movie never got the attention that it really deserved.

  • @ABW5662
    @ABW5662 Před rokem +58

    watched this clip over and over - over many years.. and yet the emotion and the intensity of the scene never fades. Brilliant writing and great acting.

  • @davidhyer2373
    @davidhyer2373 Před 3 lety +343

    That 15 seconds of silence signifying the "music stopping" is epic. No overly dramatic background music, no dialog, no special effects, just pure tension.

  • @sahumullasaud4837
    @sahumullasaud4837 Před 2 lety +509

    "Carmello, get me the cure for Covid-19 by 6:30."
    "Its done"

    • @Porformer
      @Porformer Před 2 lety +17

      Italian Professional 😎🍷

    • @garyc39
      @garyc39 Před 2 lety +2

      I would but it does not exist

    • @dezimal9143
      @dezimal9143 Před 2 lety

      @@cont6430 Did you watch the movie ? He did shit.

    • @syscabmcommunity3368
      @syscabmcommunity3368 Před 2 lety

      @@dezimal9143 yeah,, nothing

    • @trajan75
      @trajan75 Před 2 lety +4

      @@dezimal9143 No he did it, but the other guy did it first,

  • @jlight1965
    @jlight1965 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Phenomenal acting in this film. Irons, Spacey, Bettany, Tucci, Baker and Demi Moore were all simply outstanding

  • @PavyMac
    @PavyMac Před rokem +25

    Love this scene. Some executives know to listen to underlings with respect while talking down or being short with mid level management. They are smart enough to know who does the real work which in turn makes them knowledgeable.

  • @antoniohg
    @antoniohg Před 3 lety +545

    Wonderful performance of all actors in this scene. Jeremy Irons is superb.

  • @jimabo5291
    @jimabo5291 Před 2 lety +196

    "Carmelo"
    -"Yes"
    "Get me Eric Dale here by 6:30."
    -"It's Done."
    Favorite part of the scene. Doesn't hesitate, doesn't sigh, no bs, just responds with: "IT'S DONE". I need a Carmelo in my life.

  • @lukefisher2252
    @lukefisher2252 Před rokem +18

    This is one of those rare movies where every single actor is just top of their game. It's immaculate, and with the equally immaculate Big Short tells you everything you need to know about how we got to that disaster. "Like a golden retriever' it's up there with 'frankly my dear'.

  • @dubiousName
    @dubiousName Před 2 měsíci +11

    What an incredible actor is Jeremy Irons. He IS the banker 😮

  • @CaptainQueue
    @CaptainQueue Před 3 lety +832

    Anyone who's ever been in a meeting with executives and the topic is out of your league, or you are unprepared, knows how absolutely terrifying this scenario is.

    • @maxforever26
      @maxforever26 Před 3 lety +8

      Very well said!

    • @mrbrown6896
      @mrbrown6896 Před 3 lety +41

      You scared of an old man sitting in a chair. What is he going to do? Fire you ? Then go get another job.

    • @user-hx7yi6wx5k
      @user-hx7yi6wx5k Před 3 lety +156

      @@mrbrown6896 and use who as your reference?

    • @kongxiong6005
      @kongxiong6005 Před 3 lety +124

      @@user-hx7yi6wx5k LOL he flips burgers for a living what the f*** does he know. Big paying jobs means a lot of ass kissing and good references. These guys are making seven figures not five figure jobs.

    • @WestOfEarth
      @WestOfEarth Před 3 lety +28

      It seems to me everyone in this meeting was 'in their league' and very well prepared, and still it was terrifying.

  • @Mr2at
    @Mr2at Před 3 lety +375

    “It wasn’t brains that got me here”, “it was cunning and ruthlessness.”

    • @PantomimeHorse
      @PantomimeHorse Před 3 lety +10

      Yeah, love the tacit understanding in the room

    • @Eddie-by5hm
      @Eddie-by5hm Před 3 lety +2

      @Marcos Rodrigo no you cant

    • @martinwhitfield1362
      @martinwhitfield1362 Před 3 lety +2

      That, a fine English accent and a "I will gut you if you you look at me wrong" attitude

    • @anonops1980
      @anonops1980 Před 3 lety +2

      @Marcos Rodrigo pro tip, no one gives a fuck. Fuck you, scumbag spammer.

    • @zippyzipster46
      @zippyzipster46 Před 3 lety +2

      It is never just ruthlessness. Plenty of people have that. Brains and work is the key. Ruthless helps.

  • @barrycrawford7326
    @barrycrawford7326 Před rokem +89

    An incredible portrayal of actual events. As a former exec at Goldman Sachs, I can tell you that this crew of actors and the writer nailed this scene. All of the actors engaged deserve some type of award. Jeremy Irons was incredible. This is the way the financial world works, and they captured it perfectly.

  • @panagiotisgardounis962
    @panagiotisgardounis962 Před 7 měsíci +4

    What an actor, Jeremy Irons...Hats off, Sir!!!

  • @wilfordthe4th422
    @wilfordthe4th422 Před 3 lety +250

    I think one of the reasons i like this scene so much is the lack of music, not having music makes the stakes seem way more severe and real.

    • @bigbob1699
      @bigbob1699 Před 3 lety +5

      You don't need music if you have great people being great. Look at " Fail Safe ".

    • @davecrupel2817
      @davecrupel2817 Před 3 lety +5

      No music makes this scene less distracting. It makes you more focused on the subject. Lets your brain baste in the moment and better appreciate the seriousness of the situation.

    • @SJ23982398
      @SJ23982398 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah plus the subtle things thrown in. This film respects its audience, unlike that Big Short movie. If you don't understand a term, they expect you to look it up, instead of giving these stupid dumbed down quick explanations.

    • @musashi939
      @musashi939 Před 3 lety

      @@SJ23982398 yes and no. I'm glad I only started watching the movie after I started to read up on stocks, getting familiar with the terms and invested myself in some stuff. Then I watched the movie, and thought hey I mostly understand more or less what they're talking about. Before that the movie would probably have frustrated me.

    • @ardsonneveld
      @ardsonneveld Před 3 lety +8

      That's because the music had stopped.

  • @patriceauffret4240
    @patriceauffret4240 Před 2 lety +689

    Jeremy Irons is without a doubt one of the best actors in the world. This office scene is so realistic, every actors and actresses plays it right , but Jeremy Irons get you to focus, interested in the whole scene. He drives his character, his part, his words into a realistic embodiment of top flight executive manager. Sublime.

    • @meisterlymanu5214
      @meisterlymanu5214 Před rokem +6

      he was doing UK kids TV in 1979. As was Christophe Waltz in Austria. Watch them both. I want their Oscars back.

  • @qzmpful
    @qzmpful Před 2 měsíci +4

    The amused smile that Sam cracks when Irons asks to speak to the analyst is such a relatable feeling! Insane re-watch value.

  • @cnelsonlv99
    @cnelsonlv99 Před 10 měsíci +21

    This is one of the most underrated movies of all time, and this scene is the golden gem. I stumbled upon this movie randomly several years ago, and I can watch it repeatedly and every time I am riveted! Should be mandatory viewing for every US citizen, and especially for anyone in any field of economics or finance.

  • @luiscastillo7009
    @luiscastillo7009 Před 3 lety +359

    its kinda cool to see all the layers involved here... starts with the brains analytics guy who finds the problem, then the boss directs.. top executives then have to provide solution, sales steps in to weigh in, then legal, and ends with the errands dog on a quest to find a guy. Irons is just amazing here, Spacey is completely overshadowed and he's a great actor as well.

    • @andywade9790
      @andywade9790 Před 3 lety +15

      Not going to comment based on comparing this to any real life scenario...I suspect less than 0.0000001% of the public has ever been in a situation from which an accurate comparison could be drawn. But as a movie scene...I agree with you Luis, Irons absolutely owns it.. An acting masterclass by one of the greats.

    • @callmedeno
      @callmedeno Před 3 lety +4

      @@andywade9790 I was just thinking it's perfect dramatic acting, not like the more 'realistic' uncreative style of many performances today.

    • @jo-jovolkswagen7136
      @jo-jovolkswagen7136 Před 3 lety

      Iron mask seller or he is a sale representative of the globe company..or just the old boy who sell balloons for couple kids to play by the beach and the solider come or covid19 come ..( the one that left by the beach alone ..have something to do with the mask ( just the simple old lady used for business or for her health?

    • @jazinegrrrl
      @jazinegrrrl Před 2 lety +7

      Spacey's character Sam is overshadowed and his concerns are dismissed by Irons due to rank and power, but Spacey's performance is just as powerful as Irons. They played off each other brilliantly. Their different personalities and philosophies are glaring in this scene.

    • @jackbradley3388
      @jackbradley3388 Před 2 lety +4

      One thing: the errands dog, as you put it, Carmelo, is likely the head of security. While most people don't think much of this type of person (what does he do except make sure the guards stay by the door, right?), I can tell you from knowing some of these people, they are absolutely the baddest dudes in the room. A lot of them come out of military special ops forces. They pull down huge salaries just for moments like this, and if Irons said the word, Dale would be dead in an apparent "suicide" that wouldn't wind up in any of the papers. Or he would just disappear without a trace.

  • @vincentallen947
    @vincentallen947 Před 3 lety +167

    “ You’re speaking with me Mr Sullivan!” And then that look of a cold blooded emotionless killer !!! ,Worth an Oscar for those few seconds alone !

    • @ranggafahmi8479
      @ranggafahmi8479 Před 3 lety +11

      Agreed. And one more when he finds out that eric dale is fired and he stare at peterson for a few seconds like saying "you fucked up so hard". 9:23

    • @tbeller80
      @tbeller80 Před 3 lety +6

      And the brief look he gives the two of them. He knows that his management problem is on that side of the table.

  • @jlogan2228
    @jlogan2228 Před 9 měsíci +8

    "at what cost/ ill have to pay" was legit the part of the film that made it click in my head to stop being so terrified of "what ifs" and thst the best thing to do is to be wise, notice the right opportunity and choices and stick to them regardless of the potential fall out

  • @imunozdominguez
    @imunozdominguez Před rokem +7

    I’ve watched this more than 100 times. And I continue to admire it.

  • @Antonocon
    @Antonocon Před 3 lety +166

    "It wasn't brains that got me here I can assure you of that." (Faustian smile).... This piece of acting gets me every time. Brilliant. I can never stop being entertained by it no matter how many times I see it.

    • @bravesirmick8463
      @bravesirmick8463 Před 3 lety +2

      Every time his thumb flicked the pages his smile dropped just a little and his eyes got harder.
      It's simply amazing acting.

    • @rebelgusanos
      @rebelgusanos Před 3 lety

      What's a Faustian smile

    • @Holdit66
      @Holdit66 Před 3 lety +2

      @@rebelgusanos The smile of someone who has sold his soul to the Devil.

    • @johnricercato740
      @johnricercato740 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s also classic self-deprecation. You know perfectly well he thinks he is pretty smart!

    • @99thehighstreet69
      @99thehighstreet69 Před 2 lety

      Yes.im on my visit to this scene no 29 haha

  • @michaelriddick7116
    @michaelriddick7116 Před 3 lety +266

    Why do I get the feeling that "Carmello" ... isnt a finance guy ... 😎🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

    • @zill0678
      @zill0678 Před 3 lety +72

      because he's not. he's in the solutions business.

    • @Hal09i
      @Hal09i Před 3 lety +53

      Because Carmello is basically what you would politely call "head of corporate security"...or the Jeremy Iron's characters chief enforcer in more direct language. Notice he doesn't ask questions about the how, when, where, why...it's just, "it's done...". I would imagine all the big CEO's or Board Chairman have a Carmello on the payroll...

    • @amirmohamed8778
      @amirmohamed8778 Před 3 lety +15

      He s mikey palmice from the sopranos, he was in the mafia 😜😜

    • @5H4K490
      @5H4K490 Před 3 lety +14

      @@Hal09i anyone worth billions most definitely has a guy like this around.

    • @mar10ssj1
      @mar10ssj1 Před 3 lety +17

      He seems more like a human resource guy.

  • @AndorranStairway
    @AndorranStairway Před rokem +4

    This movie is a masterclass in acting. No fancy sets, no CGI, just a bunch of people talking to one another.

  • @3rddegreeburns494
    @3rddegreeburns494 Před rokem +7

    I don't know why but this is some of the best acting in a scene I've ever seen. The camera work catches it perfectly too.

  • @ukwntvlr8929
    @ukwntvlr8929 Před 2 lety +26

    Even my ads didn’t interrupt this masterpiece

  • @Ging_10
    @Ging_10 Před 2 lety +217

    When he said “Carmelo get me Eric Dale here by 6.30” was like a mafia boss calling his personal hitman to get it done…and he already “It’s done” just by being there!

    • @Baconeggncheese14
      @Baconeggncheese14 Před 2 lety +18

      Well he does have Mikey Palmice as his hitman 🤷‍♂️

    • @Srinidhi00726
      @Srinidhi00726 Před 2 lety +2

      Al Sapienza who said It's done, acted as Mob enforcer for Corrado Junior gang in the Sopranos

    • @anonyfamous42
      @anonyfamous42 Před 2 lety +1

      Does big company really have that king of guy ?

    • @aaronsalentine7876
      @aaronsalentine7876 Před 2 lety

      Melvin capital

    • @NickJohnCoop
      @NickJohnCoop Před 2 lety +6

      There isn’t any Mafia boss who has ever existed that had as much money that this guy did.

  • @ashleycollinge4491
    @ashleycollinge4491 Před 6 měsíci +4

    'You're speaking with me' - hate it when you know someone wants to say something, but they're hesitant because they're not sure if they'll get in trouble - Irons makes it clear here, brilliant acting!

  • @kevini4295
    @kevini4295 Před rokem +9

    Love this scene. Brilliant acting. They all killed it.
    Some of my favorite lines.
    Tuld "In fact I'd like to speak to the guy that put this together! Mr. Sullivan is it?".
    Forget all the formalities, go to the source.
    The best part, Peter is hesitant to answer Tuld's question, had the two other executives staring at him. CEO just says "You're speaking with ME me Mr Sullivan". Everyone tiptoeing around what the answer is, CEO wants it straight up, no formalities, no nonsense.

  • @japirovsky
    @japirovsky Před 2 lety +672

    "We are selling to willing buyers at the current fair market price, so that we may survive" I really like this quote, the CEO is trying to sell the story not only to the others but to himself too

    • @AA-gl8oo
      @AA-gl8oo Před 2 lety +91

      He’s just saying that what he is doing is not illegal

    • @jeskaaable
      @jeskaaable Před 2 lety +100

      He plays by the rules. He was the first to see that these assets are overvalued. He has the right to exploit this arbitrage.
      If he's wrong, he'd lose a lot of money. Otherwise he wins.
      There's nothing wrong in this meeting.

    • @arandombard1197
      @arandombard1197 Před 2 lety +74

      @@jeskaaable That is the dirty truth that people don't like to recognise. If I sell an asset and somebody buys an asset at a specific value, on a fundamental level, it's because I think the asset's real value is lower, or going to be lower, while the other person thinks its real value is higher, or going to be higher. Otherwise the trade wouldn't happen.
      For every trade, it is ultimately a bet of my knowledge and analysis vs the other person's knowledge and analysis, with one winner and one loser. For some reason, people only had a problem with this system when the losses were huge and causing the market to collapse, but that was just the same premise taken to its logical extreme.

    • @magmat0585
      @magmat0585 Před 2 lety +23

      I haven't seen the whole movie so i might be wrong, but my take from this clip where Sullivan's boss says he will never sell to those people again and Iron's acknowledges it sounds to me like Irons realizes his job's probably finished either way, because the firm is gonna take a loss, the only question is if the firm survives and he's willing to be the Judas goat to take the blame. The board will hold Irons accountable for something which should have been discovered earlier, even if its not directly his fault. It's the reason he gets paid the big bucks

    • @grayjedioutcast3550
      @grayjedioutcast3550 Před rokem

      I always laugh at this line. Like he knows for a fact what he's about to sell has no value and then pulls that line. Evil 😂😂😂😂

  • @IanBetteridge
    @IanBetteridge Před 2 lety +646

    This entire scene is a masterclass in ensemble acting, but there’s two moments where you get a really good insight into how good an actor Irons is. The first is when he calls on Sullivan to speak, saying in a relaxed way, with a friendly smile, “it wasn’t brains that got me here…”. Notice how his thumb is instantly flicking the pages of the report, showing how much that relaxation is a facade.
    The second is when he says, again calmly, “you’re speaking with me…” and gives a look towards the side - towards the most senior risk advisors - that betrays exactly how angry he is. It’s beautiful.

    • @zibbledyzobbledy6442
      @zibbledyzobbledy6442 Před 2 lety +31

      Anyone else enters the room: nobody looks up. Who cares. Mr Tulda enters the room: everyone stands up. "Friendly smile": like a cobra looking at a rabbit, emotionless stare, no blinking, thumb twitching folder to make clear that the thought bubble in his head contains: You have two seconds to explain it underling. Note the shift in temperature before /after Peter Sullivan´s statement: before: Jared blabla, after: Mr Cole I think this is where you come in. The room just got colder. When Sullivan speaks, the risk advisors give him the evil eye, but Jeremy gives them with a glance the bigger evil eye and freezes them out. A masterpiece of power play and dominance.

    • @Diomedes01
      @Diomedes01 Před 2 lety +32

      Couldn't agree more. I loved that sideways glance directed towards the senior associates. In the most subtle way, he conveyed to them in no uncertain terms that they shouldn't dare interrupt. Despite his calm demeanor, he was furious at the situation and the fact that they were on the precipice of disaster.

    • @a.a.1245
      @a.a.1245 Před 2 lety +1

      Beautiful indeed

  • @nardforu131
    @nardforu131 Před rokem +7

    This meeting is so compelling that it brings back memories of past scary experiences. Great actors.

  • @SophisticatedBob
    @SophisticatedBob Před rokem +24

    During the bosses speech, Jared continues to look at the slide deck as if he doesn't already know what it says. He has no clue, and is terrified of what comes next. Anybody who has ever been in a boardroom during a tense time knows that exact feeling.

  • @kerrky09
    @kerrky09 Před 2 lety +71

    I love the way Spacey’s character knows its the end but still goes out of his way to look after his team. “You’re gonna have to throw them a bone and a pretty big one”. He sets the precedent for a huge bonus.

    • @joshuaparda6374
      @joshuaparda6374 Před rokem +4

      Tbf that's really the only way to do it. They have to liquidate all of the company's asset in less than 6 hours and a huge bonus is gonna make them get the job done.
      Even Irons' character hinted it first at 6:54 when he said that he will have to pay whatever the cost, be it a bonus, severance pay for the traders and associates who are gonna be terminated, or even a "no-loose-ends" cost like when he paid Eric Dale 170k an hour to stay at the office while they were doing the fire sale.

  • @andrewflkamic8015
    @andrewflkamic8015 Před 3 lety +393

    This and the Big Short is probably my favorite films

    • @askfaisalmuslim
      @askfaisalmuslim Před 3 lety +10

      Wall Street (1987)

    • @SuperBartles
      @SuperBartles Před 3 lety +5

      the Big Short has the most stupendous trailer. The Led Zeppelin song that kicks in... I now MUST watch the film, which had better be good

    • @SiLoMixMaster
      @SiLoMixMaster Před 3 lety

      Harry Lagman When the levee breaks, amazing song

    • @cbz3237
      @cbz3237 Před 3 lety +1

      Great picks. High rewatch value.

    • @NicolaeSpan
      @NicolaeSpan Před 3 lety +1

      Same here

  • @mobilemoke-ne2gr
    @mobilemoke-ne2gr Před 7 měsíci +3

    Enjoy it over and over and over...you WONT watch it jus one time. Genius casting, award winning actors 😂😂

  • @henrypadilla7571
    @henrypadilla7571 Před 11 dny +1

    This scene will be playing out in real life (again) repeatedly over the next several months. Awesome movie scene! I’m ready this time.!😅

  • @randomnerd1988
    @randomnerd1988 Před 2 lety +289

    I love how the CEO allows a assistant of an assistant to explain the 'problem' in plain English AND walks in line with the thought process without any outbursts. The scene is without a doubt, superb with all acting and seriousness of a boardroom meeting

    • @Saxonsredux
      @Saxonsredux Před rokem +2

      Honest question...have you been in any boardroom meetings? I haven't and would like to know how accurate something like this scene is.

  • @TheChosenRed
    @TheChosenRed Před 2 lety +271

    Such a powerful scene. Irons absolutely nails the role of the emperor of his domain. Corporate gluttony at it's finest.

    • @criticalbill7715
      @criticalbill7715 Před 2 lety +6

      No doubt. He's the Gordon Gekko of this corporate outfit - utterly ruthless and an apex predator.

  • @thedarkknight1971
    @thedarkknight1971 Před rokem +5

    I've not heard of this film, but in these past nine odd minutes, with the acting of all that were there, the tension, the suspense, the drama, and brilliant work by all involved (actors, lighting, cameras etc etc), from just this one scene Heck yeah I'm going to watch this tonight! 🤔😏 😎🇬🇧

  • @DrDjDD
    @DrDjDD Před měsícem +1

    "Get me Eric Dale here by 6:30."
    'It's Done!'
    Must be one of the best and shortest conversations ever in history of film....

  • @michaels3860
    @michaels3860 Před 3 lety +156

    I like how John summons his pet demon hunter Carmello straight out of thin air.

  • @rajupj6150
    @rajupj6150 Před 3 lety +207

    Jeremy irons is just perfect for this role.

    • @Cryptokat
      @Cryptokat Před 3 lety +13

      he did come across as a bit too "hammy" - but I'll say this - in my experience in the City - he really was like the CEOs I knew. man, they are sociopaths. they really don't understand empathy. They understand "sales emotions".

    • @johnricercato740
      @johnricercato740 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Cryptokat Charismatic CEO’s are often a bit hammy - it’s an act.

  • @gzz8551
    @gzz8551 Před 3 měsíci +7

    "Do you?"
    "DO YOU!?"
    Love that part.

  • @nwstraith
    @nwstraith Před měsícem +2

    I keep getting drawn back to this scene. It's just a meeting, but it's electrifying to watch. It's a room full of smart people trying to understand the problem they're facing and make the best call they can to fix it. At least fix it from their perspective.

    • @RhiannonFan
      @RhiannonFan Před měsícem +1

      It's also a room full of brilliant actors, headed by Jeremy Irons.