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Greed

Greed

Since transitioning from TV to film in the mid-’90s, Michael Winterbottom has made at least one narrative or documentary feature per year, creatively covering topics ranging from the Manchester music scene (24 Hour Party People) to an adaptation of a famously unfilmable novel (Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story).

The writer/director’s accomplice in many of his greatest endeavors is actor Steve Coogan, with whom he re-teams for Greed, a hilarious look at the obscenely rich and the extreme wealth disparity in the fashion industry.

As tycoon Sir Richard McCreadie, Coogan relishes yet another chance to play a ridiculous person, but unlike past iterations — including the fictionalized version of himself in the wonderful The Trip series — there’s nothing remotely redemptive about “Greedy” McCreadie.

Propelled by flashy editing and Winterbottom’s textbook crisp cinematography, Greed nimbly moves between the various parts of its story, courtesy of an intelligent framing device of Sir Richard’s biographer Nick (David Mitchell, “Peep Show”) conducting research.

Through interviews with his subject’s ex-wife (Isla Fisher) and mother (Shirley Henderson), plus visits to the Sri Lankan factories where Sir Richard’s companies’ garments are made for minimal costs, the comedically awkward Nick learns of the billionaire’s rise to prominence, which has nevertheless resulted in a recent parliamentary committee hearing regarding his shady business practices.

Across these timeline hops and especially amidst preparation for his character’s ridiculously lavish, Gladiator-inspired 60th birthday party on the Greek island of Mykonos, Coogan is a steady source of zingers, but always at the expense of others. Due to the wince-inducing nature of these laughs, one fondly awaits Sir Richard’s comeuppance, though the form it takes is somewhat far-fetched, albeit still satisfying in an aptly sick way.

Somehow also managing a way to make witty, poignant statements on the Syrian refugee crisis, Greed joins Steven Soderbergh's The Laundromat in the ranks of recent films that expose loopholes currently making the rich richer and the poor poorer. And as with that under-seen gem, Winterbottom’s film gives savvy viewers the tools to take action and get the political ball rolling to enact positive change and help close the global wealth inequality gap.

Grade: B-plus. Rated R. Now playing at Biltmore Grande

(Photo: Sony Pictures Classics)

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