BOSTON — There's been plenty of excited chatter in recent days about "The Great Gatsby," the splashy — and in this writer's opinion, highly enjoyable — Baz Luhrmann film adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic Jazz Age novel.
The film debuted at the Cannes Film Festival Monday — on the very day France once again slipped into recession.
As GlobalPost's Senior Correspondent for Europe Paul Ames reported, "The symbolism of Cannes opening with Baz Luhrmann's extravagant 3-D evocation of millionaire decadence in roaring '20s New York, did not go unnoticed."
But there are other important things "The Great Gatsby" can teach us about economics, aside from how much fun those West Egg parties must have been.
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