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  1. Charlie Geller and Jamie Shipley, who are minor players in a $30 million start-up garage company called Brownfield, get a hold of Vennett's prospectus on the matter. Wanting in on the action but not having the official clout to play, they decide to call an old "friend", retired investment banker Ben Rickert, to help out.

  2. Jun 18, 2024 · While The Big Short changes aspects of the true story, Steve Carell's character, Mark Baum, is based on a real figure involved in the events. Throughout the end of The Big Short, it’s emphasized that Baum continually refuses to sell his position even though others around his team already are. Even when the collapse of the economy is imminent ...

  3. The Big Short grossed $70.3 million in the United States and Canada and $63.2 million in other countries for a worldwide total of $133.4 million, against a production budget of $50 million. [3] The film was released in eight theaters in Los Angeles , New York , San Francisco and Chicago on December 11, 2015, and earned $705,527 (an average of $88,191 per theater).

  4. Mar 12, 2021 · The Big Short is a 2015 film adaptation of author Michael Lewis’s best-selling book of the same name. Directed by Adam McKay, The Big Short chronicles the years leading up to the 2007-08 global ...

  5. The Big Short Summary. The Big Short tells the story of the lead-up to the 2007-2008 financial crisis. It focuses in particular on a few exceptional people who were able to predict the crisis in advance and thus profit from it. The narrative revolves around these characters: Steve Eisman of FrontPoint partners, who bet against the subprime ...

  6. Dec 25, 2015 · Dec. 25, 2015. In The Big Short, Steve Carell plays the outspoken Mark Baum, one of four main characters based on real-life men who worked in finance during the late-2000s financial crisis. It's a ...

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  8. Based on a book by Michael Lewis, “The Big Short” is about how several traders and hedge fund managers made fortunes because they saw that the housing market’s decline would cause a collapse of bonds contrived from sub-prime mortgages. The terminology is both dry and dizzying, the machinations incredibly convoluted.

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