All | The Money In The World

All the Money in the World is a mirror held up to our own latent greed. Most of us will never have Getty’s billions, but we live in a culture that constantly asks us to trade humanity for efficiency. We trade sleep for productivity. We trade relationships for career advancement. We trade our present happiness for a future retirement that may never come.

The answer, according to the richest private citizen in history, is exactly nothing. To understand the pathology, you have to look at the patriarch. J. Paul Getty Sr. was worth, at the time, an estimated $4 billion (roughly $25 billion today adjusted). He owned vast swaths of the Middle East’s oil. He lived in a 16th-century Tudor mansion in England (Wormsley Estate) filled with priceless antiques, including the bust of Hadrian he famously purchased to stave off loneliness. He had a payphone installed in his mansion for guests because, as the lore goes, he was afraid his servants would steal his coins.

When his grandson was snatched off the streets of Rome and his severed ear was mailed to a newspaper to prove the kidnappers’ sincerity, the world expected Getty to write a check. The ransom was a paltry $17 million. For a man of his wealth, that was the equivalent of a middle-class person today paying for a parking ticket. All the Money in the World

The film offers a silent rebuttal to the "hustle culture" mentality of the 21st century. We are taught to admire the disruptors, the titans, the unicorn founders. We are told that if we just work harder, we can achieve that level of "freedom."

But we do not live in an actuarial world. We live in a human one. All the Money in the World is a

We have a collective obsession with the ultra-wealthy. We scroll through lists of billionaires, watch reality shows about lavish lifestyles, and fantasize about what we would do if we won the lottery. We imagine that freedom is a bank balance with twelve zeros. We tell ourselves that if we just had enough —enough to never check a price tag, enough to buy healthcare, safety, and time—we would finally be happy.

Then there is the story of J. Paul Getty. We trade relationships for career advancement

Gail Harris didn't win because she outsmarted the kidnappers. She won because she refused to play Getty’s game. She understood that a person is not a price. A grandson is not a line item. And the only currency that matters in the dark hours of the night is the one that has no interest rate.

The brilliant choice of casting in the film—Christopher Plummer as the aged, reptilian Getty—shows a man who has lived so long inside the fortress of capital that he has forgotten that the walls contain people. He negotiates with the kidnappers like they are OPEC officials. He haggles over the tax-deductibility of the ransom. He eventually agrees to loan the family the money—not give it, loan it—at 4% interest.

Getty’s reaction is not horror. It is not grief. It is not even rage. It is annoyance . He looks at Chase and asks, "So, did you renegotiate the price?"

They cut off his ear.