
Then read on as Bijou colleague Bob Campbell offers up a second look at an archived post on Richard Ney. Perhaps not well-remembered as an actor (Mrs. Miniver (1942), Midnight Lace (1960)), Ney was extremely successful as an investor, money manager and investment advisor. His analysis of the stock market and the manipulation used by inside traders at the New York and American Stock Exchanges is still discussed today, and in light of recent news, continues to be relevant.

Although many of the movies seem dated because of their references to past cultural practices or then current events, it is the films’ datedness that makes them fun to watch. We have some inside tips on four films you can take to the bank.

This film was made in the last year of the Herbert Hoover presidency. In 1933 one of the landmark reforms of the first hundred days of Franklin Roosevelt’s presidency was the creation of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which guarantees the funds of depositors (currently up to $250,000 per depositor per bank). Banks have failed since 1933, but the disastrous “bank runs” that characterized previous times, shown so graphically in this early Frank Capra film, have not been repeated.

Despite the film being a period piece, one must remember that Hollywood has always valued cinematic effect over historical accuracy. Still, it is a glimpse into the kind of power struggles that happen when money meets politics. Even to this day the Rothschild family is the target of many conspiracy theories regarding world wealth, financial institutions, and government influence.

Fields wrote the screenplay under the pseudonym Mahatma Kane Jeeves (“My hat, my cane, Jeeves”), giving free-rein to his brand of loosely-jointed slapstick. Director by Edward F. Cline had been an actor in Sennett's Keystone Kops films, and it shows in the film’s climactic car chase. We can’t lie – this film is in no way educational, but it is lots of fun!

It’s a bit far-fetched to think that global capitalism can be overthrown so easily, but this Hollywood treatment of the corporate and financial culture of the Eisenhower years is an upbeat look at the power of one vote. Holliday is vibrant in one of her last films, and her wide-eyed honesty pitted against cynical politicking makes for sweet escape.
It’s ironic that, with its multi-million dollar budgets, movie moguls, and trading of actors like commodities, Hollywood should point fingers at the corruption and greed of banking and big business. Eventually Hollywood explored its own ethical failings with movies like Sunset Blvd (1950) and The Bad and the Beautiful (1952). It seems that wherever money and power are, there will always be temptation.

You can watch three great clips from The House of Rothschild over at Turner Classic Movies. Please note that Producer Darryl F. Zanuck did not shy away from controversy, and he meant for the portrayal of anti-Semitism to be villainous.
In the past 30 years there have been some great movies about banking and finance. All Top Movies.com has a Top 10 List of Classic Banking Movies, all of which are available for purchase at Movies Unlimited, along with American Madness and The Bank Dick. Most of these films deal with the inner workings of Wall Street, which by the sheer size and complexity of its operations seems opaque to all but those well-versed in finance. Read on to find out about an actor turned investor who revealed those inner-workings – to the dismay of many.
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