@article{763954, recid = {763954}, author = {Gudas, Anthony. and Corso, Michael. and Ganguzza, Rose. and Blum, Joshua. and D'Amico, Kirk. and Manis, Randy. and Elwes, Cassian, and Rister, Laura. and Jenckes, Joe. and Barnum, Robert Ogden. and Moosa, Corey. and Benaroya, Michael, and Dodson, Neal, and Chandor, J. C. and Spacey, Kevin. and Bettany, Paul, and Irons, Jeremy, and Quinto, Zachary. and Badgley, Penn, and Baker, Simon, and McDonnell, Mary. and Moore, Demi. and Tucci, Stanley. and Mandvi, Aasif, and Williams, Ashley, and Blackwell, Susan. and Dizzia, Maria, and DeMarco, Frank G. and Larson, Nathan,}, title = {Margin call /}, pages = {1 videodisc (107 min.) :}, note = {Originally produced as a motion picture in 2011.}, abstract = {Who cares about the suffering--existential, financial, or other--of those who blindly mismanaged our monies into this ever-expanding, nay, verily bottomless pit of debt? No one, but this film may help viewers understand A) the birth of current financial woes, and B) what it might have been like, in those first few hours within the confines of an early investment trading firm casualty. Fueled by a mass layoff, a thumb drive, and a rocket-scientist-cum-analyst who really understands the numbers, the last night of good times on Wall Street unfolds as rung by rung, up the executive ladder, travels news that is -- apocalyptic. For viewers who still have no idea of how 2008's meltdown happened, this film is one fiction that will make it ever so much more real.}, url = {http://library.usi.edu/record/763954}, }