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Berlinale Dispatch: Zachary Quinto, Margin Call Top Fest’s First Full Day

The problem with having festival commitments is that there are days when you can manage to see only one movie before deadline, while your colleagues are seeing two, three or — heaven forbid — more. But the sting, or at least the vague feeling of inadequacy, is lessened when that one movie exceeds your expectations. Margin Call is a thriller of sorts (though it’s also something of a comedy, albeit a grim one) set in the early days of the financial crisis, a fictionalized but all too believable account of one crucial day at a Wall Street investment firm. It’s also the debut feature of writer-director J.C. Chandor, and while it hits a few false notes, it’s still a remarkably assured piece of filmmaking. You may not think you want to sit through a nondocumentary film about the financial meltdown — I sure didn’t. But Margin Call, like money itself, is weirdly seductive; it wheedles you into caring about characters you don’t particularly like, without ever expecting you to approve of their behavior.

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Berlinale Dispatch: Zachary Quinto, Margin Call Top Fest’s First Full Day