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Bull Run (2025)
Bull Run is a 2025 comedy directed by Alfredo Barrios Jr., adapting Bill Keenan's 2020 memoir Discussion Materials. It follows Bobby Sanders (Tom Blyth), a former ice hockey player turned junior Wall Street banker, who finds billion-dollar deals outmatched in peril only by the executives orchestrating them. Starring Chris Diamantopoulos, Ashwin Gore, and Tom Blyth, the film is a sequel to the 2020 Hulu release Odd Man Rush.
Bull Run is a 2025 comedy directed by Alfredo Barrios Jr., adapting Bill Keenan's 2020 memoir Discussion Materials. It follows Bobby Sanders (Tom Blyth), a former ice hockey player turned junior Wall Street banker, who finds billion-dollar deals outmatched in peril only by the executives orchestrating them. Starring Chris Diamantopoulos, Ashwin Gore, and Tom Blyth, the film is a sequel to the 2020 Hulu release Odd Man Rush.
The film's satire targets the systemic toxicity and moral failings of investment banking, portraying the financial industry's cutthroat culture as inherently flawed. This critique of corporate greed determines its left-leaning perspective.
The film presents a mostly white ensemble with one minority actor in a supporting role that incorporates ethnic background. Its comedy subtly skewers the predatory aspects of male-dominated Wall Street culture without emphasizing equity or inclusion as core elements.
The film lacks any meaningful portrayal of family structures, roles, or values, centering entirely on professional dynamics in the finance world. This absence results in a neutral depiction of family life.
The film features no identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes.
No transgender characters or themes appear in the film. The narrative centers on a former hockey player's entry into Wall Street banking, exploring finance and absurdity without reference to transsexual identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film adapts Bill Keenan's memoir Discussion Materials, portraying the male protagonist and supporting characters with genders consistent with the source material. No instances of gender swaps occur.
Bull Run presents original fictional characters in a workplace comedy about investment banking, without adaptations, biopics, or legacy roles that establish prior racial baselines. No instances of race swaps occur.
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