All The Money In The World -

This is the logical endpoint of viewing the world purely through the lens of capital. When you have all the money in the world, you stop seeing people. You see assets, liabilities, leverage, and overhead. Love becomes a liability because it can be exploited. Empathy is inefficient. Gail Harris, the boy’s mother (played with ferocious dignity by Michelle Williams), understands this intuitively. She screams at Getty’s men: "You don’t buy a human being back. You don’t negotiate a human being. You just get them."

When you have all the money in the world, you realize you have nothing. You become a curator of a museum of misery, walking through rooms full of expensive objects, unable to feel the texture of a single one. All the Money in the World

But Getty is a ghost. He is a cautionary tale dressed in a silk suit. He proves that money cannot buy you safety, cannot buy you love, and—crucially—cannot buy you time . He spends the final hours of his life counting coins while his grandson lives the rest of his life deaf in one ear, paralyzed by a stroke (caused by the trauma and subsequent drug abuse), and ultimately dying a decade later, broken by the very world his grandfather’s money built. So, what is the takeaway? Is it simply that billionaires are sociopaths? Perhaps. But the lesson runs deeper. This is the logical endpoint of viewing the