TL;DR – A film with good intentions that nevertheless ends up talking down to its audience rather than empowering them as it is trying to do.
Score – 3 out of 5 stars
Post-Credit Scene – There is no post-credit scene

Review –
I think it is a good description of the world at the moment that a couple of
years ago one of the biggest leaks of information that changed how we look at the
entire banking sector and we have kind of forgotten about it. The Panama Papers
was this huge revelation but it is almost surprising that we have not seen
anyone try to encapsulate it in media form before now. Well, today we look at a
film that does just that, in a weird, slightly absurdist way.
So to set the scene, we open in on Ellen Martin (Meryl Streep) who along with
her husband Joe (James Cromwell) is starting the celebrations of their wedding
anniversary by taking a boat tour of a local lake. Tragedy strikes when Captain
Richard Paris (Robert Patrick) misses a rogue wave and is not able to turn the
boat in time causing it to capsize killing Joe and many others. Ellen’s grief
is amplified when they find out while the boat tour company thought they were
insured, it was all fraud, a fake company, based out of a shell corporation,
hidden behind a trust. Leading her down the well of how the wealthy hide their
money.