Inside Job
According to the great mess that took place that leads millions to lose their jobs, and houses, leaving them without any source of living, this movie embodies the atmosphere when the financial crisis took place in 2008, that leads America to a deep recession in economy, and mentions the reasons behind such a crisis.
12 August 1930, Budapest, Hungary
6 March 1926, New York City, New York, USA
6 July 1946, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
14 July 1973, Reykjavik, Iceland
12 September 1939, Los Angeles, California, USA
June 22, 2013
Ferguson is so mad he's punching at whatever's in front of him. It's understandable, but this is more polemic than documentary.
April 15, 2012
Who whacked the economy?
November 05, 2010
Wall Street owns Washington. You might think you know this, but "Inside Job" makes you feel the enormity of it.
December 13, 2011
This is a powerful and coherent work that will explain where the money has gone. It just can't help get restitution against those who did it.
November 04, 2010
Whether it's parsing the definition of a derivative or detailing the bad faith of major financial institutions, the new documentary Inside Job approaches its deconstruction of the financial meltdown with laserlike focus.
November 09, 2010
This scathing expose should be enough to alarm people all over the political spectrum.
November 04, 2010
[Ferguson] can get to a story later but provide so much more context that his film seems definitive.
November 05, 2010
You don't have to know the difference between a credit default swap and a collateralized debt obligation to feel enraged anew by Charles Ferguson's thorough dissection of the country's economic collapse of 2008.
January 06, 2013
This eye-opening documentary is critical of both parties in its search for answers about the causes of the 2008 economic collapse.
August 16, 2011
More entertaining than Wall Street 2 while saying infinitely more about the iniquities of those that claim to work for us.
February 16, 2011
You'll need a clear head to follow this impressive and angry American doc about the financial meltdown...
January 30, 2012
As a documentary, this is a clear-eyed, steadily building prosecution against Wall Street. But, in the end, Ferguson's film is just a moot trial in which the defendants have already escaped scot-free.

