Arbitrage Review: Scintillating Character
Study & Moral Bankruptcy in the Finance World
Perhaps the most flustering thing about writer-director Nicholas Jarecki’s scintillating debut is that this could be a ‘based on a true story’. The story is fiction but the characters, situations, moral ambiguities, and toxic world of Wall Street and Corporate America seem very bluntly true. It also features the best performance to date from Richard Gere.

The rest of the cast is superb. Susan
Sarandon is reliable as ever as Miller’s wife who is not just a passive
billionaire’s spouse. Brit Marling gives a breakout performance as Miller’s
daughter who suspects her father’s fraudulent dealing. Tim Roth also gives a
superb supporting turn (by seemingly channelling Robert De Niro) as a beat cop
who badly wants to pin Miller’s scalp to the wall and win one for the little
guy.
Arbitrage is set in a post-crash Wall
Street. Miller is a man insulated from the higher echelons of society. He calls
on a young black man, Jimmy (Nate Parker) to bail him out of a jam which highlights
the still existing racial and social divides in modern post-Obama America.
Jarecki is certainly a talent to watch. His debut is a fascinating character
study of a man with the perception of wielding incredible power yet tangibly
owning none of it. Jarecki also does not judge his central character. He makes
the audience route for the ‘hero’ to escape from the jaws of destruction
despite his moral bankruptcy. This hero, in his most honest exchange, describes
money as ‘God’. He worships at the altar of capitalism – and his God has no
plans on smiting him just yet.
4/5
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