Movies Starring Ralph A Wilburn Jr
Total movies found: 7, viewing from 1 to 7
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Too Big to Fail
[ 2011, USA ] starting from $1.99Genres: Drama
Actors: Paul Giamatti, Topher Grace, Matthew Modine, Billy Crudup, William Hurt, James Woods, Tony Shalhoub, Bill Pullman, Michael O'Keefe, Cynthia Nixon, Kathy Baker, Edward Asner, Amy Carlson, Dan Hedaya, Joey Slotnick, Chance Kelly, Rutanya Alda, Victor Slezak, Beatrice Miller, James Saito, Ajay Mehta, Steve Tom, JB Blanc, Ayad Akhtar, Jennifer Van Dyck, Josh Casaubon, Derek Cecil, Vincent Smith, Ben Livingston, Beau Baxter, Roy William Gardner, Rich Rothbell, Joan D. Lowry, Erin Dilly, Chuck Schanamann, James P. Anderson, Gregory Jones, Steven J. Klaszky, Derek Hedlund, Chil Kong, Gia McKnight, Chandra Thomas, Connie Watkins, Daniel K. Isaac, Robert Lindsay Evans, Ken Bulcroft, George Aloi, Loukas Papas, Danny Darrow, Charisse Matthews, Ralph A. Wilburn Jr., William Glenn, Jill Dalton, Anderson Chan, Luis Ayala, Scott Churchson, John Farrer, Patrick Michael Strange
Directors: Curtis Hanson
Too Big to Fail is actually a thriller about a time in America's financial history when our entire economy could have crumbled and almost did. Greed, the hunger for power, the hunger for money, and the lack of financial regulation all led to the financial collapse. You will see inside the egos of the cast of characters including the politicians involved. Some say that Sorkin writes with a "liberal bias" but I, as a reviewer, don't see that. He seems to write the facts based on an incredible level of documentation. I give the book 4 stars. The only reason I don't give it 5 stars is because I thought the editing was poorly done. If you want to truly understand what happened when our financial system failed and the economy went into a deep recession because of it, read this book. At the end, you will be astonished and amazingly well-informed.
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You Don't Know Jack
[ 2010, USA ] starting from $1.99Actors: Al Pacino, Brenda Vaccaro, John Goodman, Deirdre O'Connell, Todd Susman, Adam Lubarsky, Kam Carmann, Jeremy Bobb, Rutanya Alda, James Urbaniak, Henny Russell, Henry Strozier, Sandra Seacat, Neil Brooks Cunningham, Susan Sarandon, David Wilson Barnes, Cotter Smith, Danny Huston, Logan Crawford, John Rue, Allen Lewis Rickman, Kris Eivers, Thomas Piper, Donna Basilio, Richard Council, Jason Babinsky, Teresa Yenque, Jaime Tirelli, John Henry Cox, Adam Driver, Annie Murray, Ana Reeder, Angela Pierce, Jonathan Teague Cook, Jacqueline Knapp, Tom Kemp, Jordan Lage, Mason Pettit, Daryl Edwards, Daniel Marcus, William R. Spencer, Michael Ingram, Deborah Hedwall, Eric Lange, Rondi Reed, Adam Mucci, Johnnie C. Ray, Daniel Lang, Chris McGinn, Danielle McKee, Lil Mirkk, Laura D. Williams, Bill Lumbert, Richard 'Rick' Bobier, Addison LeMay, Kevin Cannon, Peter Conboy, John Farrer, Robert Feeley, Paul Weaver, Jacqueline Forton, Marty Garcia, Lisa Gaulzetti, Moe Hindi, Kevin Janaway, Joseph John Justin, Frosty Lawson, David Macerelli, Jessica B. Morton, Chad Randau, Dwayne Roszkowski, Bill Spencer, Morris Lee Sullivan, Bill Walters, Ralph A. Wilburn Jr.
Directors: Barry Levinson
Dr. Jack Kevorkian (1928 - ) in the 1990s, when he defies Michigan law assisting the suicide of terminally-ill persons. Support comes from his sister, a lab tech, the Hemlock Society president, and a lawyer. The child of survivors of the Armenian genocide interviews applicants: his sister video tapes them. He assembles a device allowing a person to initiate a three-chemical intravenous drip. The local D.A., the governor, and the Legislature respond. In court scenes, Kevorkian is sometimes antic. He's single-minded about giving dying individuals the right to determine how their lives will end. He wants the Supreme Court to rule. He picks a fight he can't win: is it hubris or heroism?




