From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Floored
Directed by James Allen Smith
Written by Andrew McAllister, James Allen Smith
Produced byJoseph Gibbons, Steve Prosniewski, Karol Martesko
Starring Bobby Ansani
Jeff Ansani
Ron Beebe
Cinematography Chris Baron
James Allen Smith
Edited by Andrew McAllister
Music by Stefan Nelson
Release date
  • September 1, 2009 (2009-09-01)
Running time
77 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Floored is a 2009 documentary film about the people and business of the Chicago trading floors. The film focuses specifically on several Chicago floor traders who have been impacted by the electronic trading revolution and whose jobs have been threatened by the use of computers in the trading world. Directed by James Allen Smith, the film runs for 77 minutes.

The film has become particularly relevant in light of the U.S. financial crisis of 2009; Greg Burns of the Chicago Tribune has said of the film's director, "By dealing with hard times in the workplace, Smith taps into a vein running through millions of lives in this brutal recession, as the nation’s unemployment rate soars toward 10 percent" [1]

Critics have suggested a meta-fictional subtext to the documentary, linking the film's storyline about Chicago traders to the plight of independent filmmakers in a time of the declining influence of film festivals and the ubiquitousness of free internet content. [2] Ironically, the documentary itself was widely available on video sharing sites before its official "web premiere" on September 6, 2013. [3]

Notes

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Floored
Directed by James Allen Smith
Written by Andrew McAllister, James Allen Smith
Produced byJoseph Gibbons, Steve Prosniewski, Karol Martesko
Starring Bobby Ansani
Jeff Ansani
Ron Beebe
Cinematography Chris Baron
James Allen Smith
Edited by Andrew McAllister
Music by Stefan Nelson
Release date
  • September 1, 2009 (2009-09-01)
Running time
77 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Floored is a 2009 documentary film about the people and business of the Chicago trading floors. The film focuses specifically on several Chicago floor traders who have been impacted by the electronic trading revolution and whose jobs have been threatened by the use of computers in the trading world. Directed by James Allen Smith, the film runs for 77 minutes.

The film has become particularly relevant in light of the U.S. financial crisis of 2009; Greg Burns of the Chicago Tribune has said of the film's director, "By dealing with hard times in the workplace, Smith taps into a vein running through millions of lives in this brutal recession, as the nation’s unemployment rate soars toward 10 percent" [1]

Critics have suggested a meta-fictional subtext to the documentary, linking the film's storyline about Chicago traders to the plight of independent filmmakers in a time of the declining influence of film festivals and the ubiquitousness of free internet content. [2] Ironically, the documentary itself was widely available on video sharing sites before its official "web premiere" on September 6, 2013. [3]

Notes

External links



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