In late 2008, "Margin Call" looked like the kind of film project that could languish indefinitely: an unfinanced script from a first-time writer-director on a wonkish subject -- the math behind Wall Street's recent collapse.
By Rebecca KeeganLos Angeles Times, San Jose Mercury News: Movies
Fri, 10/21/2011 - 1:04pm
In late 2008, "Margin Call" looked like the kind of film project that could languish indefinitely: an unfinanced script from a first-time writer-director on a wonkish subject -- the math behind Wall Street's recent collapse.