I saw the trailer in the cinema, so it will be wide release, on Sept 15th. After that, who knows. Here is a trick about subscription TV. Keep cycling through them in every 2 months, having only one service at a time. You will see everything and the cost is minimal.
HF manager suing Sony: "I’ve since learned that Griffin is locked in a nasty behind-the-scenes legal fight with Sony Pictures over his depiction in Dumb Money, which is set to begin its theatrical roll-out on Friday. Griffin has hired at least two separate law firms and sent multiple threatening letters, one of which I obtained, and he’s consulting with crisis P.R. people to push back aggressively on his depiction by actor Nick Offerman and the filmmaking team. Griffin claims the movie “crosses the line into the knowingly false and defamatory portrayal of Ken and Citadel Securities,” according to the letter sent to Sony Pictures general counsel Leah Weil by well-known media attorney Tom Clare, who is joined by Quinn Emanuel partner Bill Burck. My first thought was… really? Like I said, I saw the film, and no, the depiction of Griffin certainly isn’t positive—ditto the portrayal of other GameStop players, like Gabe Plotkin (Seth Rogen), whose fund lost billions shorting the troubled game retailer, and Steve Cohen (Vincent D’Onofrio), whose Point72 fund helped prop up Plotkin (and who, of course, is wearing a Mets hat in the film). But to my eye, the sharp script, written by former financial journalists Rebecca Angelo and Lauren Schuker Blum, doesn’t stretch the key facts beyond the widely circulated news headlines about the GameStop frenzy and the S.E.C. investigation, or the source material book, The Antisocial Network, by Ben Mezrich. And I know it was vetted heavily by both Sony and producer Black Bear Pictures, which hired the Jassy Vick Carolan firm."
What a cry baby this Ken Griffin is. Shades of Citizen Kane when the publishing magnate was pissed off at his portrayal in the film.
Opinions about the movie: old.reddit.com/r/Superstonk/comments/16i71o0/i_saw_dumb_money_early_here_is_what_i_have_to_say/ old.reddit.com/r/movies/comments/16oy3c1/official_discussion_dumb_money_spoilers/
The film so far has been losing money. I am sure when it gets on the streaming platform, it will be more popular... "In its opening weekend, the film made $229,947 from eight theaters. Expanding to 616 theaters in its second weekend, the film made $2.4 million, finishing in eighth. In its third weekend the film made $3.3 million from 2,837 theaters, finishing in seventh." US and Canada haul is around 12 MM against a 30 MM budget.
I finally watched the movie. The music was annoying, but these are the times we are living in. Anyhow, what I found interesting was that everyone was all in or out. It didn't occur to the small investors that they could sell partial gains and lock in some profits. Thus the Pittsburgh lady losing it all.* Melvin Capital going out of business because of a meme stock was pretty funny. The revenge of the nerds. *"That includes Kim Campbell, a nurse based in Los Angeles, who is featured in Mezrich’s book and is part of the inspiration for the nurse, Jenny, played by America Ferrera in Dumb Money, who ends the movie in slightly less debt than she started with. Campbell has dipped in and out of retail trading and penny stocks for quite some time and bought her first 100 shares of GameStop sometime in the fall of 2020. Since then, she’s added to her position and only ever sold five shares — at $420.69. When I asked whether she’d made money on the investment, her response was frank. “I’m not up,” she said, though she continues to hold — diamond hands. She feels tied to the GameStop community (though she now frequents the message boards less) and is sure the company has plans, though she’s not sure what they are. And hey, maybe the Mother of All Short Squeezes (MOASS) that some of GameStop’s most diehard fans are still holding out for will pan out. “Part of me is like, if it’s going to the moon, I’m not going to give up my seat, I’ve got my tickets,” she said." https://www.vox.com/money/2023/9/15...everyday investors made,plenty of them didn't.