Adam McKay Explains Pop Culture Cameos In 'The Big Short'

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right now on The Hollywood Reporter infocus and I didn't think this was going to be made the movie I think this was once this started happening and books started being turned in the movie I was still didn't bet on this one it's too complicated people have sort of a cursory knowledge of what happened in 2008 but when you start peeling away the layers of the fraud it's incredibly terrifying we're going to be taking an in-depth look at the comic drama the big shore with the actors and the creative minds behind the film on this episode we have Adam McKay director and Co screenwriter Michael Lewis author of the book - Big Short Christian Bale dr. Michael burry Steve Carell mark Baum and Ryan Gosling's Jared Bennett you know what I'm pissed off American people we're getting screwed by the big banks and I'm getting madder and madder it's unbelievable then this guy walks into my office and says there's some shady stuff going down a few outsiders saw what no one else could the whole world economy might collapse I'm sure the world's banks have more descent of the green you're wrong welcome to The Hollywood Reporter InFocus the Big Short I'm Matt Bellamy executive editor of The Hollywood Reporter and I'm pleased to have with us today Michael Lewis the author of the Big Short Adam McKay the co-writer and director of the Big Short and three of the film stars Ryan Gosling Steve Carell and Christian Bale this is a dramatic work it's a funny movie it's obviously a topical movie but it's at its heart it's to me it seems like a piece of advocacy filmmaking where did that come from and how did you get involved in this really what excited me about the book was the idea that you were able to be taken into this really elaborate complicated world through these characters these characters that you identified with there were Outsiders that were vulnerable that thought differently so I always looked at it as a character piece that took us into a world we weren't familiar with and I just never read anything like that so when I read the book I couldn't put it down it had such a mixture of like you know it was entertaining it was tragic it was sometimes heartbreaking and yes a little bit educational so you know as far as being you know having a political or policy sort of position to it I never really looked at it that way I just looked at it as exposing and showing a world and most of all these characters but the one difference from the book is that it's it's funny wait a minute wait on one difference in the books so glad he said it would have been weird if I said it but why was that decision made why was this satirical angle I will actually disagree I will actually say the book was very funny there were there were a lot of things in the book that made me laugh it was always an energy and excitement to the story especially in the first half where it was almost like card counters guys who had figured out how to meet the casino and you were on their side because we all hate the banks or the casino of your books did you think this would be one that would be adapted it's only recently my books have started been made into movie so when I wrote this none of the blindside hadn't been made so I didn't there are people the movie business bought my books I assume they bought them to bury them I mean I didn't I didn't think this was going to be made to move I think this was once this started happening and books started being turned into movies I was still didn't bet on this one is too complicated you know it's it was a I thought the only way you'd do it well is it is to embrace the complexity anything anybody have the balls to do that basically so what were those conversations like did you have conversations about how to no explain that he doesn't care what I think he said I'm glad he said it yeah I said it no no it's really that he doesn't care what I think I mean I told us that you know I know absolutely absolutely this is qualification for the job is that he doesn't care what I think did you ever ask yeah it's not true I definitely tried what do we do I checked in with you I gave you the script we talked about my approach to it you were really supportive you were great you were kind of like the dream author in the sense that you had some input but you didn't you know fight what I was doing maybe you were patronizing me the entire time I just realized that no we're practicing each other oh it was just because it was a question who was getting on top of that okay because that was all that was going on cuz he had what he had to do was break it and remake it I mean that the book is not a movie it's so different in so many ways and he I mean I was when I heard he was going to do it I thought perfect it's perfect because the only way you get this across to an audience and the only way the reason the book worked is people thought the book was funny I mean that so the they were interesting the cat and the characters were funny nobody wants to read about credit default swaps no we gonna see a movie about it and I thought if anybody can make this brings alive and make it entertaining it's him so the relationship is he's sort of because I'm alive instead of dead and that's an inconvenient fact that he has to store a lot he doesn't let me run around saying he ruined my I ruined my work art and and so he was nice about we even have lunch and all the rest and I really liked him but he did it all by himself I mean I didn't I contributed nothing well I'm a huge fan as well I've read everything he's written so it was a thrill for me I mean the reason I read the book was I loved your writing so there was just a certain degree of fun to having conversations with you and he's also working on a TV show with our composer who's also a producer so Michael sort of has some tendrils in different directions bait back to your original question it's totally his I can't believe how good it is I was really reassured that someone like him saw that you could thought you could do this because the only way it works as he does is if it's big and popular now you guys playing real people tell us how you approach that the consulting you did with the real life guys or non consulting in my case he's the character I play is is loosely based on a real person but he's also the narrator of the film he sort of the tour guide through this world so it was interesting I mean it was it was a challenge because you know trying to sort of you know play him but at the same time have one foot outside of the movie and basically be you know almost like a talk-show host or something so you know we worked a lot together and trying to find what that tone is and I talked a lot to the to the real person you know and sort of explain to him that that's what I was doing and that I'd have to sort of what were those conversations like you know they were it's it we don't it would be the same if someone was playing you you know you'd be nervous as how I would want to know and and you feel a responsibility to to that and I mean I wouldn't want someone to play me so you know unless it was Steve er LRO talk to you like nobody's buying CDO or mortgage bonds anymore and everybody wants wop-wop stand out among popular productt on the jury that's good for us Anthony I heard some some of you were somebody no house no sorry then see Grover Morgan is picking out some heavy losses in the bond department it might be time to get our lifejacket get out I mean seriously I feel like I'm financially inside of you or something okay I'm Jack object to the dress good you feel it no Steve how about you with Steve Eisman I'm sorry she approached him with utter disregard you say exactly the opposite oh I mean I mean yeah I can't imagine how daunting it is to see a version of your life put up on screen it I met with him we had breakfast I didn't spend too much time with him I I read up on him there wasn't you know aside from the book and a lot that I could find out about it but just try to glean a sense of who he was and what he had gone through during this period and why he made the choices that he chose to make other than changing his name in the film what was there anything specific that he asked you or you to not include about him or his personality I think I was kind of about right now yeah well for that reason that's an odd question no but not specific neither secret city way like I can be perceived as an ass please you know don't go say no no he was very gracious that way and very generous about um revealing himself and inviting me over to his house and I met his wife and I met his kids so no there was none of that um I'm sure there were trepidations you just don't know he was there on set a few days watching I think he saw the film and apparently enjoyed it he loved it um I can't imagine what that's like to see someone doing a version of who you are you know he said he had better hair that was his one comment it's like because he was very very proud of his hair he said my wife married me because of my hair Wow so he held that he held his hair in high regard I would have a doctor Michael berry Michael was very accessible he came to visit the set number of times today mm-hmm uh and he's individual you know I got to go and spend the day with him and we we sat down and you know we kind of had a schedule of now we do this and then we go for lunch and then we saw around him and it ended up that I sat down in the morning and then it was dark and we hadn't stopped talking we're just talking it was like eight or nine hours straight incredibly charming and wonderful conversationalist I became very very fond of him so Mike burry guy who gets his hair cut at Supercuts and doesn't wear shoes knows more than Alan Greenspan and Hank Paulson yeah dr. Mike burry yes he does I don't believe he's seeing the film yet I was hoping I'd be able to sit and watch it with him last night but I think he's singing it in New York but I love playing real characters because you create a man a man a resume or whatever it may be and the director might question that you've got the evidence you can just if the person is on the set call them over and just chat with them for a little bit and go see right you know there is all right so then you get away with it rather than if it's entirely fictional sometimes it can seem sort of ego driven to be crave mannerisms that might be quite unique or eccentric you know but I really immensely enjoyed getting to know Mike and and hope very much that he would he'll tolerate what I've done the book in the film both go into detail on the kind of person who does this kind of thing who bets against the conventional wisdom who you know is looking at bad things happening and betting on that happening do you consider yourself that kind of a person no no very conventional it really the only thing that's odd about me is where I'm from I grew up in New Orleans and the rest of the country feels an alien place to me that's it so I have there's a bit of it's it's dissipated with time because I've left but I do remember very strong feelings very early on a deltad feeling I was a Martian visiting earth and so I've had that that view of American life I'm interested in these characters but I don't think I'm like that talked about the idea that the people that take the short position in Wall Street they don't look healthy like if you see someone who's assured isn't this true absolutely true yeah that it actually takes a toll on you because you're betting against the hope of the future and that a lot of these guys look hunched over and pale and it's a rough road and it's what happened to dr. burry yeah dr. burry almost had part of his lower intestine removed he was having such stomach issues and as soon as he unwound his position all the problems went away so it's a really hard uncomfortable position to be against the mainstream to be against and I actually think in some ways that's the core of the movie there's a lot of cores of the movie but I think that idea of how hard it is to step away from the pack and say you're wrong no one wants to do that everyone wants to be at the party and they want to be a part of what's going on and when I heard that there was actual physical effects on people that are short in Wall Street I thought that is fascinating did you worry in in the movie that it would have the audience would have a hard time rooting for the financial collapse of the country no I mean what I loved about it from that from the book from the story is how complex it is that you're rooting for these guys because they're sort of like us they're Outsiders you know in a sense they're doing their job like the way the markets supposed to work is if there's a bad investment you short it so they're kind of doing their job and then obviously the story expands times 10 once they realize they're oh they're shorting themselves they're shorting actual reality and then it gets scary and very complicated so now I always love the fact that the heroes weren't clean that they weren't all wearing white hats I wanted them to be complex because I just don't think that's ever how heroes work I mean to look at Gandhi used to cat around when he was young and MLK and like people are complicated how familiar we were you with these issues before reading the book they know about what happened but not the personal stories no certainly not and you know we all have personal stories that relate to that time but but the my new of what went down no I really didn't I didn't have any great grasp until I read the book of what what it what had happened and I think that's part of the reason it's so important is that I think and and the movie starts out that way that it's important that people people have sort of a cursory knowledge of what happened in 2008 but when you start peeling away the layers of the fraud and and the duplicity it's incredibly terrifying and that aspect of I I wasn't I wasn't terrified in 2008 it was a news report and it was affecting a lot of people but I didn't know the depth of it mmm how come the banks let this happen it's fueled by stupidity but that's not stupidity that's fraud tell me the difference between stupid and illegal and all my wife's brother arrested the position that the that it takes the this idea that it's intentionally alienating is like a liberating idea certainly was for me you know it sort of takes some of the pressure off and it allows you you know I think that that they're both you know assuming the best of you and that you can understand this and that it's you know by just sort of breaking it down in the way that they have it's sort of it really shows you that it that it's true that it is something that is probably meant to to just make you feel stupid so that you don't ask questions what do you hope to accomplish ultimately with this film who do you hope sees it and what kind of possible change do you hope to effect you know first and foremost I hope that people come and they hook with these characters they hook with this story emotionally and then at the end of the day I hope they just feel closer to these events that they can suddenly say something about this that maybe a few conversations start there's been several presidential debates where they don't even talk about bank reform which is insanity and I just hope that you know if there's movies like this if there's books if there's other movies coming out that that won't happen of those people at these presidential debates do you think any of them will do anything Hillary Bernie Sanders nothing significant no I think Bernie Sanders would but I don't think he'd ever have the Congress to back them they would lock him at every turn it's really about Congress not so much the president right Congress has the power I mean you could fix this in a week like it's not hard like have a clearinghouse for derivatives you can see what's being traded where the risk is going bring back a new version of glass-steagall have a transaction tax and then probably for other things that Michael could say too but like it's not hard we had these rules for 40 years and we had no boom-bust cycle and then all of a sudden we got rid of them we deregulated and those are Democrats and Republicans did that and then boom we're right back on this boom-bust cycle it's ridiculous not even Trump i well steve carell loves Trump's so I don't want to cross any lines here I don't want to get him upset no I've I've I've made no bones about that yeah Ryan's a Carson guy Quarles a Trump guy so let's not talking about affiliations just been outed so yeah but seriously though the Trump Trump would make this better worse no difference let me try that that's like that's like saying we have to ask serious questions that to me would it make it better or worse if you threw a cat on it like it's no that's just raw insanity I mean it's like letting we're would this help if we set 20 house cats loose in the White House like just America starts to crumble at that point right Christian how is working with Adam different than some of these directors you've worked with like Chris Nolan or David or Russell Adam Adam uses a microphone and so so so he didn't have to actually look at me that's the hope I said I guess I was just kind of prisoner inside of my office and he would just talk to me give me and so that's crap do again and make jokes so I thought so but very good vibes very good vibrations on the on the set he creates a wonderful the crew loved working with him it was it was a very fun set but really creative at the same time I'm testing the Adam will only talk to you if you you bring if you bring a bag of hamburgers and you go to a graveyard oh that's nice that sounds like it what story what's the story there no that's just the way he gives notes so you grab a bag of hamburgers and you go to a graveyard and Adam tells you how that's just what it is is it sounds crazier than you're hearing it it's that when you're on the set you know there's a crew around you and I want to have time with the actor and I want somewhere that's quiet and usually we're hungry so I get a sack full of hamburgers and I'll look for a graveyard go we sit there nothing odd about that ya know it sounds the way he said it reason and we'll sit in a rainy graveyard for two hours and just talk about acting and you were in New Orleans so their graveyards ever look graveyards every year so no he made it sound crazy but it's pretty standard stuff and then a lot of times I'll take them into if we're in a building there'll be a boiler room and we'll go into what they really did Christian into a boiler room for three hours and just screamed at him in a bunch of and mostly in German just sounded oh yeah really help really help go the headlands only helped yeah once I Steve how is working with Adam different on this movie then say anchorman or some of the more outrageous congress's it was more similar than you think because you know he's he's the same person directing both movies he's incredibly smart and really funny and obviously very the difference was the passion that he I had for this subject matter not that he wasn't passionate about newscasters in the 70s but it's a different you know it's a different animal and I think that approach is completely different but the freedom that he gave actors was absolutely the same and our ability to improvise and to discover things and to fail was exactly the same Dimity that me improvise every now you guys should know that Christian couldn't improvise I kept yelling read the words I wrote I didn't write them for nothing honest Mike going yeah nope nope you forgot an ant ant also I've never worked on a film that was shot that way before that was so I thought the does so well just that the cameras were really in the corner of the room they were never in there wasn't like close-ups or you know there wasn't coverage at all you never knew what hit the camera zipping lenses they were on a zoom and so you really were free to play the scene in many different ways and and he would sort of you do it too you know to the script and then you'd sort of abstract it until it was sort of like coming off the rails and then he would bring it back in the end and I'd never worked that way and I thought that it really kind of brought the best out all of us that's Barry Aykroyd is you know amazing at that he loves the long lens style and that's where you get this zoom in and out over I get that intimacy between the actors you're not in their way I love it - I don't know if I'll ever do anything but that in the future I liked it so much you knew you had to make these complicated things relatable how did you come up with the fun and different ways that you were going to explain these CDOs like Margot Robbie or the Jenga tower or any of that other cells all on the book right every bit of it yeah every Margot Robbie and imagine Margot Robbie would be a huge star and it had a paramount logo in his book was really weird when you read it no I think the idea was we we kept talking about why doesn't our pop culture what ain't pop culture isn't the right word why doesn't our mainstream culture tell us this stuff why aren't we learning about this on the news why aren't we learning about it through documentaries why aren't we hearing people talk about it why isn't it Gustin debates and what are we hearing about instead so there was this whole idea for the movie that we were going to have pop icons showing up we're gonna have like Morgan Freeman at one point is going to narrate the movie and then suddenly he was going to say like it's showing off the you know ratings for the movie that you're tired of me so now here's Tom Brady to narrate the movie and we had this whole crazy idea it was a bit too much the form became too loose and all over the place but what stock were those explanations I love the idea of seeing you know these pop icons that you're so familiar with give you real salient information it's just very strange to have a you know Margot Robbie in a bathtub explain what went wrong with MBS is you could almost do a whole series of Margot Robbie in a bathtub explains you know algorithms Margot Robbie in a bathtub extinguish yeah yeah so you know it's a bit of a joke it was a bit of a comment on our popular culture and what is the information that we're getting from it and it also just felt like because it was an in Samba movie and had this loose kind of playful feeling to it it felt like it could roll in that rhythm as well and how did you settle on these guys settle is the operative word uh i additionally auditioned and auditioned you see Steve as that guy why ever why do you immediately go to that because you guys had worked together before why why in this cast of fantastic actors did you work together before and you know this was a this was a kind of a guy who had that high tension to him know the truth is these were like the dream choices I don't think it's ever happened before where whenever I write the script I like to think of people and these are the guys I was thinking of when I was writing the script usually they don't say yes so you know I just have these crazy actors that I admire and love sort of in mind and a bunch of great you know luck came together and that these gentlemen had some free time and responded to the material and we're excited to get to work on it so yeah it was amazing I've never ever experienced that before and and then it continued through the rest of the cast we had Francine mais ler was our casting director and she's kept bringing in these amazing actors people like Jeremy strong and Finn whit rock John Magaro and Hamish and raves ha it was so good all right so what's the leo for one scene Melissa Leo just smokes that scene yeah and Marisa Tomei like you've got to be kidding me Tracy Letts like I mean the scene with Tracy Letts and Christian where he comes to his office I just could watch that scene over and over again you have no confidence in your ability to identify macro economic trends you flew here to tell me that why everyone can see that there's a real-estate bubble actually no one can see a bubble that's what makes it a bubble that's dumb Laurence it's always markers mortgage fraud quintupled since 2000 the average take-home pay it's flat but home prices are soaring that means the homes are debt not assets give me an interesting anecdote about one of these actors like a Melissa Leo or or someone like that uh well Marissa Tomei is a thief she wills take out of your trailer she will really no no but something from one of your CD me you were you guys played opposite all these I would not gets in a lot of fights I don't know what you guys think interesting at a touch whose idea was the the sunglasses the Melissa Leo where's that was actually from the original Charles Randolph script okay and I loved that I loved it in there there was the girls of genius idea yeah you know all right here's one of the funniest ones Billy Magnussen plays one of the mortgage brokers with max Greenfield and he's the sweetest guy and he shows up for like two days and he's young guys he's partying down in New Orleans and at one point he wants to do his laundry so he sees a bunch of laundry in the washing machine on our wardrobe truck and he takes it all out that's wet so he just shoves it in the dryer and they puts his clothes in the hit the washing machine what he doesn't realize is these are like $15,000 worth of wardrobe for Carell these are like Briony tailor-made and the next day I thought I put on my shirt I was like I couldn't have gotten this fat overnight in one day and I yeah and then we put two and two together but he felt so bad - he's like I messed up you fired him after I did fired him in suitum front everything in front of everyone yeah it was a public firing Christian what's it like to do your scenes knowing that the rest of the movie is being created around you and you're not a part of most of that fantastic it's really great it's really great where we started you know the whole film style with that so everyone was sort of getting the test the waters with it and and it was nice right because I mean we were able to be I mean I suspect it was the most static set right that without a doubt that you had so we could really get comfortable in this one environment and and feel it all out and and go through it a crazy number of pages each and every day work over a really wonderful speed which is fantastic and it felt really great and then it makes it so entertaining for me to watch the film at the end because I don't know anything about anything else that's going on I mean it's all fun for me what surprised you most then when you saw the final film it we actually it was really poignant that was how that was really what surprised me about it because in reading the script I could see it be really bloody funny in places from a character's point of view and clearly Adam you know knew how to do that was going to do that really nicely but it was how very meaningful and poignant and an emotional I felt whilst watching the film and and there's that moment where I forget the number I think the numbers 15 billion right that is said in a scene and I found myself getting choked up over a number you know which is a phenomenal thing you know to achieve on Michaels planet you talked about the same thing Mike Goldman well exactly complement you all right I'll talk about it I thought you were passing a compliment on to Mike no he's definitely dug me and he'll give a compliment from me today so I get to cop on the right there's if yours was enough I mean one of the windows ever happen a number and when I heard that number I just got goose aware that also happens is when you write the number on the board with that one 489 up 489 percent right that's it's a you're right it is another emotional emotional yeah it might be much of it film says that poor people and minorities largely took the blame for this what do you specifically mean by that well I think you're seeing it now where all the sudden rather than talking about trade policy rather than talking about you know minimum wage rather than talking about business stimulus instead what are we mostly talking about with the presidential campaigns old AWOL building a wall to keep immigrants out and you know we had a census not too long ago and it actually showed definitively more immigrants are leaving than coming in so it's literally a non-issue but I think what happens is people don't understand these complex financial structures and instruments no idea the kind of crap people are pulling and everyone's walking around like they're in a damn Enya video they're all getting screwed you know you know what they care about they care about the ballgame or they care about what actress just went into rehab they know something's wrong and they go towards what they understand you see the same thing in Greece there's a rise in the neo-nazi movement there and and this is always what happens whenever there's an economic fallout whether it's immigrants whether it's poor people what's the one thing that you three took away from this project one thing you learned could be an acting lesson or something about the world what if they didn't learn anything more maybe you didn't learn alright and it could just be like an experience that it just happened just happened you always like something I mean you know you get to meet it's a wonderful job in terms of that you get to have these very bizarre conversations in this case with you know real-life individuals and get to talk to them in a way that usually only a stalker would get to if you kind of tied them up and it because you get to really delve deep in a way that you just can't in everyday life and so you learn so much about that character and that's that's what I really that's probably my fun part I think of my job and then I just listen to Adam and Michael and you know like didn't pay attention in school and left at 16 so it's a learning experience for me every bit of it you know have you guys well it was that it was learning I I don't think I have struggled learning a script um that as I did with this because it was like learning a foreign language I didn't have any prior knowledge of the the financial world I didn't grow up in it I didn't really know people in it and so it was all new to me too so to to kind of take a crash course in it in order to have some sense of what I was saying um and to be able to and Adam likes to improvise to so to have some some stuff in our back pockets that we could then improvise within these characters and in this world that was I think a learning experience did it inspire you to want to invest you know be more active in the financial market I don't know no you're not trying to identify your own shorting in a mattress under I sleep on it every month truth is subjective stupefying right the only reason it's interesting is the characters yeah subject itself is absolutely stupid it made me want to identify places where maybe I could see something nobody else is seeing oh gods and I know it would never happen lose all your well yeah I said there is no your life becoming these guys yes I'll just do it right no it's my my brother decided you know what I'm gonna start investing and I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna master the market and he's a six year old guy in Orange County I'm like it will it's not going to happen you know you you're an engineer and he's smart enough guy but he not doesn't have that kind of acumen and I don't think it's something that you just pick up overnight it's not I don't think it's it's that intuitive I think you really need to you have to have been brought up in it and have learned it from the from the ground you know well I was dumb enough to start thinking I in short things and I actually was talking to a friend of mine we were talk about McDonald's were like McDonald's like they can't keep selling this food they're selling like it's the you know it's everything's getting better they're gonna go down so I called my business manager said I want a short McDonald's and he goes Luis really knows how funny this is and my guy goes boy I think that's a bad idea and he goes let me check with our guys and see how it looks and okay because I really like Shake Shack and I think McDonald's is done I gotta turn a bygone era he goes yeah my guys are long on McDonald's they actually say it's very strong they're in a bunch of mutual funds the real estate holdings they have they are changing their menu all right well maybe I'll wait and then since that time McDonald's has gone up 25 percent it just goes up and up and shake Shack's kind of stuck around where it was my guys saved me from that yeah Ryan how about you what'd you learn um yeah I think you know I think I'm like the audience on this one you know I really felt like this was something maybe I thought I understood but I really didn't and I also felt like on a certain level it's probably then something that I couldn't understand but I think I think what Michael did by sort of just finding really fascinating characters at the heart of all of it is why you're able to you know connect to it emotionally and therefore you want to understand it because you want to understand these characters and I think what Adam has done is made it accessible and really cast such a wide net in terms of like avenues for understanding you know I mean even though you know Marco Robbie and Selena Gomez and all of those those things are fun and they're great and they're and the people are great in the movie it's also another avenue to grab an audience that might not necessarily see the film or might not necessarily think that they could understand it so dude making this movie make you guys more cynical or more hopeful I didn't I didn't differentiate between cynicism and hope I it terrified me but I think it's just it's like a horror movie it's a romp until it's not and then it's a horror movie and I think it creeps up on you and surprises you it's terrifying I know now I'm cynical yeah gonna put that on a poster well I don't know I think I think there's not a book and and the film are leave me feeling optimistic just in a sense that it's something that it's information that it feels like it's in the process of being you know you know disseminated to the masses and in and like the code is being is being broken you know I guess I hope I hope that the people liked the film because it'd be great to see more films like it you know I think it's it's so great the atom could take such an entertaining approach the subject matter like this and I think that that might just be the way to sort of start the dialogue I mean even already you know I've only been to a few screenings but immediately afterwards you know the conversations after the film are very different than after any other sort of what a premiere screening that I've been to you know me much more hopeful just because if Mike burry he's an attorney he really is unusual for him to go for a short he that's what he loves Long's and these are easy very optimistic man thank you all very much I would like to thank Michael Lewis Ryan Gosling Steve Carell Christian Bale and Adam McKay thank you thank you thanks for having us a pleasure
Info
Channel: The Hollywood Reporter
Views: 924,288
Rating: 4.9206252 out of 5
Keywords: The Big Short, Movies, Entertainment, Film, Adam McKay, Michael Lewis, Roundtables, THR, The Hollywood Reporter, Christian Bale, Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling, wall street
Id: NcV2FPXg5is
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 37min 1sec (2221 seconds)
Published: Wed Dec 02 2015
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