Liar's Poker film in the works

See http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/moneyball-a…

Obviously, the fact that a script is in the works doesn't mean we'll ever see it on screen, but it seems like the political and social climate is right for a movie adaptation, and it's encouraging that Lewis is the one who's been tapped to write the script, or at least the first version. Thoughts?

 
Edmundo Braverman:
I think that's a terrible idea. It's only going to ruin a great book, and things are so different now compared to the mid-80s that it's either going to suck or it's going to leave movie goers saying, "huh?".

I think he's a great writer, but I don't have high hopes for this movie.

I agree with you, but I will still watch it.

 
Edmundo Braverman:
I think that's a terrible idea. It's only going to ruin a great book, and things are so different now compared to the mid-80s that it's either going to suck or it's going to leave movie goers saying, "huh?".

I think he's a great writer, but I don't have high hopes for this movie.

RE: 80s, I think it's bad because people are going to project whatever negative feelings they have towards Wall Street from this shit and go SEE THOSE EVIL BANKERS SETTING MONEY ON FIRE WHILE CATCHING HELICOPTERS
 

what was exaggerated? phones being smashed? gambling on the floor? gluttony? yelling, screaming, cursing? helicopters to AC? if you have worked with any of the ex-solly guys on the street (now, most are clustered in just a couple of banks) you know those things are not exaggerations.

 

Man all of you are extremely depressing cynics. I for one look forward to having a great book written about Wall Street being brought to the movies. Who cares if it's a little pokey? It's fun, get over it. Movies aren't meant to be driven 100% to a Wall St. audience. Sometimes a little 'push' is needed to persuade a larger audience into viewing things. Welcome to the movie business.

I don't think the new remake of Wall Street was all too bad either for the reasons posted above. Whatever man, it's Shia Lebeouf.. see past it, it's all fun.

Or wait you know what.. I'd rather have no great books about Wall St. brought to the movies because I'm too afraid that they will ruin the book. We all know the book is great. The movie isn't going to change that.

 
Best Response
rothyman:
Man all of you are extremely depressing cynics. I for one look forward to having a great book written about Wall Street being brought to the movies. Who cares if it's a little pokey? It's fun, get over it. Movies aren't meant to be driven 100% to a Wall St. audience. Sometimes a little 'push' is needed to persuade a larger audience into viewing things. Welcome to the movie business.

I don't think the new remake of Wall Street was all too bad either for the reasons posted above. Whatever man, it's Shia Lebeouf.. see past it, it's all fun.

Or wait you know what.. I'd rather have no great books about Wall St. brought to the movies because I'm too afraid that they will ruin the book. We all know the book is great. The movie isn't going to change that.

I agree with everything except the comment about Wall Street 2. That was the biggest puddle of horse piss I've ever tried to sit through. I stopped watching it 20 minutes from the ending.

-MBP
 
rothyman:
Man all of you are extremely depressing cynics. I for one look forward to having a great book written about Wall Street being brought to the movies. Who cares if it's a little pokey? It's fun, get over it. Movies aren't meant to be driven 100% to a Wall St. audience. Sometimes a little 'push' is needed to persuade a larger audience into viewing things. Welcome to the movie business.

I don't think the new remake of Wall Street was all too bad either for the reasons posted above. Whatever man, it's Shia Lebeouf.. see past it, it's all fun.

Or wait you know what.. I'd rather have no great books about Wall St. brought to the movies because I'm too afraid that they will ruin the book. We all know the book is great. The movie isn't going to change that.

I had a hard time adjusting to "evens stevens" try to play a badass energy trader.

Here's the thing. If you can't spot the sucker in the first half hour at the table, you are the sucker.
 

Why does every good book these days have to have a film adaptation, sad reflection on the wider populous.

Also very keen for Margin Call.

"After you work on Wall Street it’s a choice, would you rather work at McDonalds or on the sell-side? I would choose McDonalds over the sell-side.” - David Tepper
 

~Spoiler warning: if you haven't read Liar's Poker~

I would love to see Liar's Poker as a movie and think it may educate the broader public on various areas of finance. Three interesting themes that most people would probably get a kick out of:

1.) How the mortgage market developed from a niche backwater product desk into the most profitable financial engine that drove Wall Street in the 1980s... The financial crisis brings the story to a full-circle especially since it is the evolution of this market that caused the markets to collapse in the 2008.

2.) How even the mighty are not invincible. The financial crisis showed how vulnerable even Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs were and how independent investment banking models simply might work anymore. The 80s two powerhouse banks Salomon Brothers and Drexel Lambert don't exist anymore because Wall Street is fickle. Salomon Brothers was at the top of the world one day and then was fighting for survival just a few years later...

3.) How many people in finance don't really have a clue of what's going on. If you read about Michael Lewis' incoming associate class at Salomon Brothers, you'd think they were a bunch of high school kids. Even Ranieri's highly profitable mortgage desk was a bunch of unsophisticated / average traders who got lucky catching a good wave. It really was an instance of a blind squirrel finding a nut...

 

^^ Somewhat agree with your 3rd point. Ranieri was brilliant in that he was able to essentially develop a monopoly trading mortgage bonds but stupid in that he pissed it all away. I honestly don't think the mortgage trading floor at Salomon was "unsophisticaed / average" i just think Lewis exaggerates their personalities by describing their pranks, eating habits etc. and play into the idea that Salomon was THE bad ass place to be in the 80's. Ultimately Lewis is trying to sell books so he's going to make them sound as ridiculous as he can to create a good story.

Here's the thing. If you can't spot the sucker in the first half hour at the table, you are the sucker.
 

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