Orlando Sentinel

Coogan skewers super-rich in satire

- By Gary Goldstein

In Oliver Stone’s 1987 film “Wall Street,” corporate raider Gordon Gekko, played by Michael Douglas, reveled in the pronouncem­ent that “greed … is good.” It became a kind of mantra for those go-go years at the end of the Reagan era and immediatel­y beyond.

Now, more than three decades later, in a world that’s been reshaped by 9/11, life-altering financial crises and a staggering rise in both income disparity and corporate influence, writer-director Michael Winterbott­om’s largely effective satire, bluntly titled “Greed,” tells us that greed is not only bad, but potentiall­y fatal. Let’s just say the phrase “Eat the rich” takes on a whole new meaning here.

At first, this story about one of the world’s more notoriousl­y awful onepercent­ers — a slippery and abusive fashion magnate named Sir Richard McCreadie (frequent Winterbott­om collaborat­or Steve Coogan) — may feel like the last thing we need to sit through at this particular­ly fractious moment in time. Aren’t we bombarded with enough examples of obscene wealth, egregious inequality and unchecked narcissism every day via mainstream and social media?

Maybe. But after an uneasy start, Winterbott­om’s kaleidosco­pic script (“additional material” by Sean Gray), which revolves around an ultra-lavish 60th birthday party McCreadie throws himself on the Greek island of Mykonos in a desperate bid to repair his muddied public image, coalesces into a thoughtful, pointed, at times deceptivel­y profound look at how the rich get richer and, well, you know what happens to the poor.

The film, equal parts mockumenta­ry, mordant biopic and tragicomed­y, moves back and forth in time to show how McCreadie became “the youngest self-made billionair­e in British history,” while earning such other labels as “The King of High Street,” “the unacceptab­le face of capitalism” and “Greedy McCreadie,” the last hatched during his boarding school days as a ruthless gambler (wellplayed by Jamie Blackley as the younger McCreadie).

In “Big Short” style, we learn how McCreadie wheedled his way into the retail business, opening one brand of failed clothing store after another, yet netting more and more money in the process due to dubious realty, hiring, tax and financial practices.

Via the egomaniaca­l McCreadie — and Coogan’s expertly hateful turn — the film vividly, unsettling­ly shows how whoever holds the purse strings holds the power, and how one wields that power makes all the difference. To that end, McCreadie fails the humanity test miserably — he’s vile and cutthroat and seems proud of it. Nonetheles­s, he keeps himself and his savvy ex-wife, Samantha (a pitch-perfect Isla Fisher), kids (Asa Butterfiel­d, Sophie Cookson, Matt Bentley) and crusty mom (Shirley Henderson) awash in mammoth wealth.

A series of flashbacks depicting McCreadie’s cruel behavior toward the hapless manager (Charlie Cooper) of a new fashion outlet called Xcellent (not) speaks volumes.

Much of the narrative, however, unfolds through the eyes of McCreadie’s “official biographer” Nick (David Mitchell), a selfeffaci­ng literature buff who has interviewe­d a few of the mogul’s old associates and visited a Sri Lankan sweatshop with ties to McCreadie before landing in Mykonos to observe his haughty subject and the manic swirl of excess around him.

But the film’s eventual heft comes through the character of Amanda (Dinita Gohil), a young Sri Lankan-born woman now living in Britain, who works as an assistant to McCreadie. She will come to represent the real toll billionair­es such as her boss cavalierly exact on the lowliest rung of society and its unsung web of consequenc­es.

Yet, despite the movie’s sobering, end-credit statistics, we have no reason to believe the greedy won’t get greedier.

 ?? Running time: AMELIA TROUBRIDGE/SONY PICTURES ?? R (for pervasive language and brief drug use)
1:44
Sir Richard McCreadie (Steve Coogan) throws himself a lavish birthday party on the island of Mykonos in “Greed.”
Running time: AMELIA TROUBRIDGE/SONY PICTURES R (for pervasive language and brief drug use) 1:44 Sir Richard McCreadie (Steve Coogan) throws himself a lavish birthday party on the island of Mykonos in “Greed.”

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