The Movie ‘Margin Call’: No Happy Ending

Spoiler alert: The commentary below — by Wharton new media director Kendall Whitehouse — on the film Margin Call contains significant details about its plot. You may want to see the film before reading on. For additional commentary, visit Whitehouse’s blog, On Technology and Media.  

Economic thriller Margin Call is in many ways a difficult film to like — and that’s what makes it worth seeing. The movie’s uncompromising look at desperate men (and one woman) in the throes of a moral crisis finds no happy ending. And that can be both grueling and fascinating to watch.

Written and directed by first-time feature filmmaker J.C. Chandor, Margin Call takes place in a large investment firm over the course of two days and one very long night during the economic meltdown of 2008. In the middle of that night, the company realizes its highly leveraged mortgage-backed securities are more sensitive to volatile market conditions than was previously thought, and recent market movements have already passed the threshold that their models predicted. The investment scheme and the financial products on which the scheme is based are unraveling. When it’s determined that the company’s financial exposure exceeds its market capitalization, the corporate officers are faced with a fateful decision: Sell the soon-to-be worthless assets — and, in the process, harm not only their customers, but also their own reputations (both as individuals and as a firm) — or let the company go under. The movie follows several employees as they come to grips with the ramifications of this dilemma.

The strength of the film — which is also what makes it difficult to like — is that all of the characters’ actions are unpalatable. This is not a story of good guys versus bad guys; it’s a story of people making seemingly rational,if terrible,choices.

There is a clever moment of misdirection in the film’s trailer which shows the head of the firm,John Tuld (Jeremy Irons),saying,”There are three ways to make a living in this business: Be first,be smarter or cheat.” The surprising next line in the film — which is not included in the trailer – is: “And I don’t cheat.” His dictum to his staff isn’t to cheat but,rather,to be quicker than their competitors — and sell the toxic assets before others realize their declining value. He’s not breaking the rules — he’s merely using them to his advantage.

Well acted and well directed,the film moves at a crisp pace as the crisis mounts and pulls more people into its orbit,yet the movie isn’t afraid to pause for a momentous silence at several points. There is a harrowing power in the lack of histrionics in the characters’ actions. The soft tones of everyone’s oh-so-professional demeanor make several scenes particularly chilling. The personnel officer utters well-rehearsed answers to any possible question as Eric Dale (Stanley Tucci) is being let go from the firm. When Sarah Robertson (Demi Moore) tells Jared Cohen (Simon Baker) that if they are going down,he knows that they will both go down together,he icily responds, ”I’m not sure that I do know that.”

Despite our desire for someone to make a noble gesture of defiant righteousness, Margin Call doesn’t give us that cathartic satisfaction. There is no Jack Godell (Jack Lemmon) in the China Syndrome shutting himself inside the nuclear power control room to prevent the reactor from being restarted, no Bud Fox (Charlie Sheen) working with the Feds to snare Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) in Wall Street. There are just people making desperate choices.

While some characters — such as Kevin Spacey’s morally conflicted Sam Rogers — are more sympathetic than others,when faced with the film’s crisis,each makes essentially the same loathsome choice. Their reasons differ: It’s the only choice they believe they have; they are serving a greater good; or they simply need the money. Some are motivated by political machinations,some by weakness and some by fear,but in the end,they all feel they have no option other than the choice each eventually makes.

Margin Call is a closely-observed study of motivations — all of which differ, but all of which ultimately lead to essentially the same devastating outcome. One could leave the film with the view that everyone is corruptible, that we all yield to our weaknesses once the incentives are sufficiently great. While that may be true, the film’s underlying thrust may be more complex — and more harrowing. The problem isn’t simply human nature; it’s the system we have created that has such incentives, where the only choice is the deplorable one. While we may not be able to change human nature, we may, one hopes, be able to fix the system of incentives that leads to such lamentable outcomes.

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  • Anonymous

    Having been a broker for 23 years, this was very chilling and memorable. To sit in a board room and discuss the future, which occurs in the next 8 hours is mind numbing and at the end of the day, there is no positive comment to make except that most people are still breathing, some-what. I watched the film three times over the next week because there are little parts that rise to be better seen and heard. I did not see the film because of the players, but because of the story. My personal story was trying to unwind a mortgage just to pay it off in 2004 before moving to China. It took over 30 days to piece the mortgage back together, to price it and give me a number to use at the closing. Great film.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_QYL3QTATLNY4CKQ6QTOZHP5HCM anne

    Thank you for this intelligent commentary. It adds a great deal to my enjoyment of the film to read the insights of someone who understands the business depicted onscreen.

    I’m hoping you might be able to clear up my confusion about one detail at the end, which seems like an important emotional pivot point. On the morning of the “fire sale,” Sam tells the junior traders that although they are destroying their own jobs, their reputations, and possibly ruining their clients,  they will receive a million-dollar bonus if they achieve a certain goal. Then, at mid-day, some traders are laid off and Sam is furious. Is the implication here that the traders who are laid off mid-day will not receive the bonus, no matter what their performance was? In other words, that Sam realizes that on top of everything else, he was used unwittingly as a vehicle to convey a false promise to his own staff?

    If that is the implication, then the ending compounds the tragedy of Sam — a person who was loyal to a certain professional code and is betrayed by his own firm after a lifetime of dedication. It also makes Tuld appear even more sociopathic.

    If that isn’t the implication, then the film more or less shows that even though Tuld will pursue a scorched-earth strategy to save his own neck, he at least has provided some kind of safety net to the underlings who carried out his plan. I guess there is a different kind of tragedy in that scenario, the tragedy that people who are the soldiers in this kind of economic pillaging may never feel much regret since they are somewhat protected from the consequences.

    I’d be interested to hear your take on this. Thank you!