Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Do you think "Big Bear" is real?

Do you think "Big Bear" is real?

The film doesn't limit its perspective to Wall Street offices. We followed the characters in the film to the south for a field trip, personally visited the empty and depressed communities, contacted the lenders with easy mortgages, and visited the strippers with 5 suites; The most exciting thing is that they attend the meeting of professional revelers, let those who see through and stupid revelers confront each other head-on, and only after discovering that their opponents are much more stupid than themselves can they relax. Information asymmetry is the most important factor to focus on silence and get rich. All these enable us to see the whole picture of this developing crisis from all aspects.

Of course, ordinary people are kept in the dark in times of crisis. At the same time as the story develops, the film deliberately interspersed with familiar social news at the same time to reflect people's ignorance of disaster fermentation. The rise and fall of financial markets is one cycle after another. In the credits, CDO appears with a new look, which seems to indicate the unfortunate fate that ordinary people will pay the price for the accident again.

Seven years have passed since this crisis, and most people's wounds have gradually healed. Therefore, the film can review the history with a pungent and humorous attitude, make the story more exciting and intense with sharp and quick editing, and contrast the ignorance of most people with prominent characters. In order to make it easier for the audience to get involved in the plot, the film also broke enough paper for the camera to let the characters explain directly to the camera from time to time. In order to help the audience overcome the psychological barriers of financial knowledge, even let "laymen" like supermodels, chefs and singers explain it, which narrows the distance with the audience and shows us that this is a financial documentary that really wants you to understand what happened, rather than making up terms in a mysterious way.