Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Curve balls


Money Monster is a thriller that takes on current issues and offers some surprising twists, which only adds to its interest and appeal.
 
 

A cable financial guru, Lee Gates (George Clooney), is on air with his show “Money Monster” when a deliveryman ambles onto the set, pulls a gun and takes Lee hostage, forcing him to put on a vest laden with explosives. The hostage taker is Kyle Budwell (Jack O'Connell), who invested $60,000—his entire life savings, inherited from his deceased mother—in stock from a company Lee had endorsed a month earlier on the show.

Despite the extreme measures he’s taking, Kyle’s anger reflects the anger of many people who are struggling to get by. The company he invested his money in, IBIS Clear Capital, is run by CEO Walt Camby (Dominic West). Lee planned to interview him on his show to ask why the company’s stock had plummeted the day before, costing investors $800 million. Instead, IBIS chief communications officer Diane Lester (Caitriona Balfe) explains via a video feed that the stock fell because of a glitch in a trading algorithm.

Kyle wants answers, and unless he gets them, he says, he will blow up Lee before killing himself. The police are notified, and they try to figure out a way to diffuse the bomb. Meanwhile, with the help of longtime director Patty Fenn (Julia Roberts), Lee tries to calm Kyle down and get him some answers. However, Camby is nowhere to be found, and Kyle is not satisfied when both Lee and Diane offer to compensate him for his financial loss.

The plot gets even more complicated, and I don’t want to give too much away. The film maintains its suspense while including some unexpected twists.

Racing against time, Lee and Patty use their resources to try to find out where Camby is and what’s behind the stock’s plummet. Diane also tries to find Camby and gains some information that challenges her commitment to the company.

Money Monster sets up some unrealistic situations and at times is heavy-handed about the corruption involved in our financial markets. But it also throws in some curve balls that alter our perception. Just as we’re ready to blame one evil man for not only Kyle’s problem but our own, the film confronts us with our own complicity in the way CEOs run their companies. We as stockholders tend to overlook these CEOs malfeasance when our stocks are making a profit, and we get upset when we learn about their misdeeds, especially when those lead to our losing money.

And the ending, which depicts the watching public’s fickleness, is superb. And Jodie Foster’s direction and the acting throughout is excellent.

Money Monster, rated R for language and some violence, is entertaining and includes some thought-provoking elements. But it’s not going to change many people’s behavior.