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In the real-time, high stakes thriller, George Clooney and Julia Roberts star as financial TV host Lee Gates and his producer Patty, who are put in an extreme situation when an irate investor who has lost everything (Jack O’Connell) forcefully takes over their studio. During a tense standoff broadcast to millions on live TV, Lee and Patty must work furiously against the clock to unravel the mystery behind a conspiracy at the heart of today's fast-paced, high-tech global markets. (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)

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Reviews (9)

kaylin 

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English I like that it takes place in a small space and that it's primarily a film that wants to captivate and entertain the viewer. However, it's also a film that shows the problems within society. It's depicted quite naively and superficially, but then there are words spoken that are terrifyingly true: "What can you do to me?" "What have I actually done that's illegal?" ()

POMO 

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English Money Monster is thriller with a nice concept but a weak dramatic drive. The emotional ending is impressive, but everything before that is neither as engaging and dynamic as in Ron Howard’s Ransom nor as cleverly plotted as in Spike Lee’s Inside Man. What it is, though, is as forgettable as Costa-Gavras’s Mad City. I am surprised that someone as ambitious as George Clooney agreed to produce this. Maybe he relied on the director’s more personal input (and talent). ()

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agentmiky 

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English I definitely wouldn’t have guessed Jodie Foster would transition to directing, but lo and behold, she’s done it, and her debut turned out to be exceptionally good. Don’t expect a film that’s constantly in motion; this one takes a different approach. The lead duo of George Clooney and Julia Roberts delivering exceptional performances is a strong guarantee of quality, as they are top-notch actors. And I shouldn’t forget Jack O'Connell, who hasn’t given such a convincing performance in a long time (aside from Eden Lake, where he excelled). Films centered around uncertain business deals and investing in various companies are quite rare, and with the added suspense, you shouldn’t hesitate and just watch the film. I’ve always been fascinated by films set in a single location, where you rely on the actors and their credible delivery of lines, since the audience doesn’t look away much. It had a few slower moments, but everything was building up to the finale, which I guessed immediately, but that didn’t bother me at all. Sometimes straightforwardness isn’t a bad thing. I give it 77%. ()

Othello 

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English A much over-used and tired fight movie that impresses only in the way it manages to combine several thematic relics from different times into a single whole. Namely, the illusion of the omnipotence of television, the Occupy syndrome, the cunning bankers who cannot be brought down except by popular grassroots justice, or the common folk connected by a television screen in the upper corner of a room in a cozy bar. Although it manages at times to update the entire framework by punishing the main capitalist with an internet meme or deliberately knocking itself down a level in a joyous video conference scene with the knocked-up moll of a young terrorist, the final climax with its endlessly incompetent police, chanting people, and epilogue fist in the air in the face of a criminal bourgeois quickly reminds us what kind of film museum we are actually in. ()

D.Moore 

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English I guess it's on the level of Mad City – nothing too original or surprising, but a well-acted and seamlessly shot film with a good concept. George Clooney and Julia Roberts are one of those dream acting duos and would draw attention to practically anything, so it's a good thing they don't waste their star potential. As for the script, I liked that everything took place in real time and I enjoyed all the black humor and satirical quips. ()

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