SYNOPSICS
The Flaw (2011) is a English movie. David Sington has directed this movie. Andrew Luan,Robert Shiller,Louis Hyman,George Cooper are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2011. The Flaw (2011) is considered one of the best Documentary,History movie in India and around the world.
People all over the world are still struggling with the aftermath of the greatest financial crisis since the Wall Street Crash of 1929. We all know what the effects have been but what exactly were the causes? The Flaw ranges widely across the history of American capitalism in the twentieth century, its rigor laced with sardonic humor and peopled with a cast of characters that spans Nobel-prize winning economists and distressed home owners to the New York Times financial correspondent on the brink of foreclosure and the Wall Street banker who feels the pain encoded in his spreadsheets. The film argues that the roots of the crisis lie in the changing relationship between the rich and the rest in American society.
The Flaw (2011) Trailers
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The Flaw (2011) Reviews
Excellent documentary
An extremely interesting look at the problems associated with capitalism in America. This documentary goes hand in hand with Michael Moore's CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY, although there's more of an emphasis on helping the viewer to understand technicalities (whereas Moore focused on showing the human side of the story). I came out of it with a better grasp of Wall Street, the real estate market, boom and bust and consumer society in general, which is no mean feat. The voice over narration is well judged, the graphs extremely useful and there are no dull bits. The use of old cartoons and film clips adds comedy to a documentary you wouldn't think of as amusing. Recommended.
Well-done but incomplete explanation of 2008 financial collapse.
Well done, clear, but simplistic and incomplete explanation of financial collapse of 2008, the causes in toto of which will no doubt continue to be debated for decades. I see two major problems with this presentation. The first and most significant is that while the production does not completely ignore the role of the government, it hardly discusses it at all. The well- accepted truth is the the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (Financial Modernization Act of 1999) which eliminated the Chinese wall between investment banks and other banks (which occurred during the Clinton administration with Clinton's blessings) combined with a very extended period of low interest rates by the Fed is what set the stage for all of the private sector abuses to follow. The government failures are only glossed over in this production. The second, less significant flaw, is that the efficient market hypothesis is presented in an oversimplified manner. There are actually a few different versions of the efficient markets hypothesis, and many people accept less strident versions (like I do), in the sense that the market may not be "truly" efficient, but in reality it is still very, very difficult to beat the market and either escape a bubble before it bursts, or, if you are a regulator, to burst it before it grows too large. As a matter of fact, at this very moment, this is exactly what is keeping me awake at night with regard to my investments and, no doubt, what the individual Fed members are presently mulling over in private. We'll see which way things breaks this time, although I'm not personally optimistic that human beings have the ability and foresight to manage such a complex system with so few and such brutish policy levers.
Inadequate explanation
A rather mild and weak explanation of the way people were duped before the 2008 crash and the sheer uncaring criminality of the suffering caused to many ordinary people who lost their homes, jobs and much more. For a more robust examination of and explanation of what went on, watch The Big Short instead, it's more entertaining and enlightening.
Riveting documentary
Utterly fascinating and very well put together account of the true source of all that "bother" in 2008. Highly recommended. It would be wonderful to hope that we will learn lessons from this, but unfortunately human nature doesn't work like that. "Greed is good."
Scant documentary that every person should watch once
The Flaw delivers the story of the causes of the financial crisis and what may have caused it. There is bias in this documentary but it isn't as overt as most documentaries. The great thing and the reason why I believe that everyone should watch this movie is that this documentary delivers a the information of the financial crisis in a format that is easy to digest and gives great visual representation of everything that lead up to the collapse. The flaw of The Flaw is that there are some stories and story lines that are personal to one or two people instead of a whole audience. These stories, in my opinion, are David Sington's attempt to elicit an emotional connection and reaction to what happened with the financial collapse. This makes the documentary feel more personal and allows the viewer to feel more connected to the issues. That said, that is part of what I am not a huge fan of with these types of documentaries. I personally would have rather just had the information and the graphs and charts showing what happened without the personal stories so that the movie wouldn't feel so biased. This is a good documentary that is a scant 78 minutes, has good information and is easy to get through.