Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA small financial institution called Abacus becomes the only company criminally indicted in the wake of the United States' 2008 mortgage crisis.A small financial institution called Abacus becomes the only company criminally indicted in the wake of the United States' 2008 mortgage crisis.A small financial institution called Abacus becomes the only company criminally indicted in the wake of the United States' 2008 mortgage crisis.
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 7 victoires et 12 nominations au total
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UNBELIEVABLE!
I have never written a review but feel compelled to by the emotional response and anger this documentary has stirred. It is a well-done documentary, and I guess I am just shocked by its content.
I have studied the 2008 financial crisis extensively. I had no idea this happened. The US government and the New York DA's office should be absolutely ashamed. The fact that this happened makes me disappointed in my government. Part of me is holding some hope that the documentary is extremely biased and one sided (though I do not believe this is true). It makes me physically ill to think that the large financial institutions such as Citi Group, Bank of America, JP Morgan, etc., got away with what they did in causing the financial crisis and our government spent its resources persecuting this small family run community bank. Unbelievable.
I have studied the 2008 financial crisis extensively. I had no idea this happened. The US government and the New York DA's office should be absolutely ashamed. The fact that this happened makes me disappointed in my government. Part of me is holding some hope that the documentary is extremely biased and one sided (though I do not believe this is true). It makes me physically ill to think that the large financial institutions such as Citi Group, Bank of America, JP Morgan, etc., got away with what they did in causing the financial crisis and our government spent its resources persecuting this small family run community bank. Unbelievable.
Steve James is a very famous documentarian who was robbed when his master work "Hoop Dreams" was inexplicably ignored by the Oscars in the Best Documentary Feature category in 1994. His later films included "Stevie", "The Interrupters" and the moving record of Roger Ebert's last days, "Life Itself". And now finally the film that brought James his first nomination for Best Documentary Feature.
"Abacus: Small Enough to Jail" is an excellent documentary that centers on the Abacus Federal Savings Bank, a family-owned community bank in Manhattan's Chinatown which became the only bank to actually face criminal charges following the 2007 mortgage crisis - and only because it was deemed not 'too big to fail', an incredible injustice by the U.S. Justice Department merely looking for a scapegoat. But the film is not primarily socio-political; it is, in fact, a 'David vs. Goliath' story of the court battle of the Asian family's defense for their honor against the gigantic U.S. government, and, without shying away from showing the family's internal squabbles and moments of weakness, the film documents the difficult daily sacrifices necessary for them to stand up for their principles.
Perhaps some will find this too much a 'standard' documentary, but I feel the story and characters interesting enough not to necessitate a stylistic 'hyping up', and, as is, the film perfectly captures its time and place while keeping us on the edge of our seats until the final verdict. Critic Matt Zoller praised the director for "finding the universal within the specific", and for the film creating a portrait of Chinatown as a thriving community that "defines itself in relation to...American culture... but never entirely comfortable or accepted." It is also an inspiring film of an immigrant family who struggles to survive through a conflict that they know is virtually impossible over which to prevail - but still they find they cannot submit to what they see as an injustice they did not come to America for. This is a film I truly loved. Don't miss it.
"Abacus: Small Enough to Jail" is an excellent documentary that centers on the Abacus Federal Savings Bank, a family-owned community bank in Manhattan's Chinatown which became the only bank to actually face criminal charges following the 2007 mortgage crisis - and only because it was deemed not 'too big to fail', an incredible injustice by the U.S. Justice Department merely looking for a scapegoat. But the film is not primarily socio-political; it is, in fact, a 'David vs. Goliath' story of the court battle of the Asian family's defense for their honor against the gigantic U.S. government, and, without shying away from showing the family's internal squabbles and moments of weakness, the film documents the difficult daily sacrifices necessary for them to stand up for their principles.
Perhaps some will find this too much a 'standard' documentary, but I feel the story and characters interesting enough not to necessitate a stylistic 'hyping up', and, as is, the film perfectly captures its time and place while keeping us on the edge of our seats until the final verdict. Critic Matt Zoller praised the director for "finding the universal within the specific", and for the film creating a portrait of Chinatown as a thriving community that "defines itself in relation to...American culture... but never entirely comfortable or accepted." It is also an inspiring film of an immigrant family who struggles to survive through a conflict that they know is virtually impossible over which to prevail - but still they find they cannot submit to what they see as an injustice they did not come to America for. This is a film I truly loved. Don't miss it.
Documentaries may be about true stories, but that doesn't mean they can't stir up emotional responses in the viewer. The last documentary I read, about first responders in Aleppo, Syria, made me feel anger against the callousness of governments, and sympathy for the strong and courageous men who have to deal with the consequences. This movie, too, made me rail against not just the enormous insensitivity of my own government, but also just how incompetent it seems to be.
"Abacus" is the name of a small federally chartered savings bank, with just six branches, operating in New York's Chinatown. It was founded by a Chinese man, born in Shanghai, who immigrated to the United States as a child with his parents. He went to law school and practiced law for a while and then decided to help his native community by operating a bank that could provide credit to other Chinese immigrants who have a native mistrust of banks, government, and pretty much any institution who wants a share of their money. In addition, to operating his bank, successfully for many years, he, with his devoted wife, also raised four amazing daughters, three of which also became lawyers and the fourth, a physician. In short, this was an impressive family - smart and hardworking.
The documentary camera spends a lot of time with this family, in their offices, and frequently in Chinese restaurants eating big, and appetizing, Chinese meals. We learn that the family is close-knit, loving, and commanding a sense of humor, in addition to being smart and committed to both their family and their community.
They had to have those qualities, in order to survive an ordeal that lasted five long years and would threaten their bank, their reputations, and their freedom. Abacus Federal Savings Bank was not just the first, but the only bank in all of America that was charged and prosecuted with felony charges as a result of all the financial misbehavior that created the 2008 financial collapse of America. You have to think about that a bit. If, like me, you've been waiting for ten years now for leaders of America's biggest banks (like Chase, Goldman-Sachs, Wells Fargo, and Citibank) to actually pay for the suffering they caused Americans because of the greedy deals they fraudulently packaged and promoted, then this documentary will do nothing except make you angry.
Instead of going after the banks that were 'too big to fail', instead, Cyrus Vance, the D.A. For the Southern District of New York, instead took the incredibly easy and cowardly approach of trying to punish a small community bank that had, at worst, committed some omissions of proper oversight over some of its employees. The Sung family, and the managers they employed, were definitely guilty of failing to adequately oversee several of their mortgage processors, because, frankly, they trusted them more than they should have. But, after five years of building a case, the assistant district attorney couldn't connect all the dots to prove criminal intent on the part of the owners, she instead developed absurd theories based on cultural misunderstandings and career advancement goals. No doubt she had encouragement from Vance who was desperately looking for an example that would pretend to show that they were indeed doing something about the financial crisis. They found a bank that was "small enough to jail!"
I've been concerned for some time now about the lack of leadership in our political institutions. It seems we have embraced leaders who are not only just plain stupid, but who also are motivated by the basest of impulses. This movie does nothing to alter that opinion. I give the movie 8 stars for so effectively making me angry!
"Abacus" is the name of a small federally chartered savings bank, with just six branches, operating in New York's Chinatown. It was founded by a Chinese man, born in Shanghai, who immigrated to the United States as a child with his parents. He went to law school and practiced law for a while and then decided to help his native community by operating a bank that could provide credit to other Chinese immigrants who have a native mistrust of banks, government, and pretty much any institution who wants a share of their money. In addition, to operating his bank, successfully for many years, he, with his devoted wife, also raised four amazing daughters, three of which also became lawyers and the fourth, a physician. In short, this was an impressive family - smart and hardworking.
The documentary camera spends a lot of time with this family, in their offices, and frequently in Chinese restaurants eating big, and appetizing, Chinese meals. We learn that the family is close-knit, loving, and commanding a sense of humor, in addition to being smart and committed to both their family and their community.
They had to have those qualities, in order to survive an ordeal that lasted five long years and would threaten their bank, their reputations, and their freedom. Abacus Federal Savings Bank was not just the first, but the only bank in all of America that was charged and prosecuted with felony charges as a result of all the financial misbehavior that created the 2008 financial collapse of America. You have to think about that a bit. If, like me, you've been waiting for ten years now for leaders of America's biggest banks (like Chase, Goldman-Sachs, Wells Fargo, and Citibank) to actually pay for the suffering they caused Americans because of the greedy deals they fraudulently packaged and promoted, then this documentary will do nothing except make you angry.
Instead of going after the banks that were 'too big to fail', instead, Cyrus Vance, the D.A. For the Southern District of New York, instead took the incredibly easy and cowardly approach of trying to punish a small community bank that had, at worst, committed some omissions of proper oversight over some of its employees. The Sung family, and the managers they employed, were definitely guilty of failing to adequately oversee several of their mortgage processors, because, frankly, they trusted them more than they should have. But, after five years of building a case, the assistant district attorney couldn't connect all the dots to prove criminal intent on the part of the owners, she instead developed absurd theories based on cultural misunderstandings and career advancement goals. No doubt she had encouragement from Vance who was desperately looking for an example that would pretend to show that they were indeed doing something about the financial crisis. They found a bank that was "small enough to jail!"
I've been concerned for some time now about the lack of leadership in our political institutions. It seems we have embraced leaders who are not only just plain stupid, but who also are motivated by the basest of impulses. This movie does nothing to alter that opinion. I give the movie 8 stars for so effectively making me angry!
Very well-done documentary about small (2,651st largest bank in the U.S. at the time) family bank in Chinatown New York prosecuted for financial crimes after 2008, has interviews with all the major players (bank employees/owners, prosecutors, defense attorneys, jurors, audio from witnesses, etc.)
Absolutely head-scratching as to why the D.A. thought this was a good place to satisfy public outrage over the Great Recession (politics and racism are hinted at but not fully explored). (I do wish this angle has been pursued in more depth.)
Basic plot: low-level employees are fleecing home buyers into giving them cash fees and then falsifying their loan applications so they get approved by higher-ups, the government decides this is evidence of a systematic conspiracy and tries to go after the bank itself (this despite it having an extremely low default rate, which makes it strange that Fannie Mae is named the defendant in the case because overall it got much more money from this bank proportionally than from thousands of others, particularly the giant ones who not only didn't get prosecuted but actually got bailouts (courtesy of you and me)).
Also shows incredible scenes such as the bank employees shackled together in a chain gang and paraded into the courthouse in front of news cameras (which by all accounts is an unheard-of practice nowadays); the Manhattan D.A. (Cyrus Vance Jr.) and one of his underlings ("Polly Greenberg" iirc) are both masterful in denying any kind of prejudicial motivation in selecting and prosecuting Abacus (the case took five years and cost taxpayers ten million USD and resulted in *zero* convictions).
Anyone need anymore evidence that giant corporations run this country? Anyone?
Absolutely head-scratching as to why the D.A. thought this was a good place to satisfy public outrage over the Great Recession (politics and racism are hinted at but not fully explored). (I do wish this angle has been pursued in more depth.)
Basic plot: low-level employees are fleecing home buyers into giving them cash fees and then falsifying their loan applications so they get approved by higher-ups, the government decides this is evidence of a systematic conspiracy and tries to go after the bank itself (this despite it having an extremely low default rate, which makes it strange that Fannie Mae is named the defendant in the case because overall it got much more money from this bank proportionally than from thousands of others, particularly the giant ones who not only didn't get prosecuted but actually got bailouts (courtesy of you and me)).
Also shows incredible scenes such as the bank employees shackled together in a chain gang and paraded into the courthouse in front of news cameras (which by all accounts is an unheard-of practice nowadays); the Manhattan D.A. (Cyrus Vance Jr.) and one of his underlings ("Polly Greenberg" iirc) are both masterful in denying any kind of prejudicial motivation in selecting and prosecuting Abacus (the case took five years and cost taxpayers ten million USD and resulted in *zero* convictions).
Anyone need anymore evidence that giant corporations run this country? Anyone?
This documentary had me fuming. The Too Big to Fail Banks got off scot-free, and actually made money from the crisis they created. Meanwhile, a bank catering to a migrant community, who tries to do the right thing gets screwed by an overzealous, politically motivated DA.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSteve James' first Oscar nomination for Best Documentary Feature, following notable omissions like Hoop Dreams (1994) and Life Itself (2014).
- Citations
Himself - Founder, Abacus Federal Savings Bank: Abacus, you know, is the Chinese calculator. China Regards abacus as a national treasure. So we say we'll name the bank Abacus.
- ConnexionsFeatured in La 90e cérémonie des Oscars (2018)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Banken som fick skulden
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 113 278 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 12 528 $US
- 21 mai 2017
- Montant brut mondial
- 113 278 $US
- Durée1 heure 28 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Abacus: Small Enough to Jail (2016) officially released in India in English?
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