1.1407 Unless "sympathy" can become an upward ladder, it is not necessary for me at all
"Financial resources are the premise of human and material resources." Female star Anelice Ackerman turned his attention to female inventor Heidi Rama: "Heidi, is your 'cheap husband' interested in investing in a railway located in the Far East?"
"He is only interested in arms." Heidi Rama, the female inventor, shook her head: "Besides, we need to find a bank for financing."
"Wait." As soon as the words finished, a new plot memory immediately surged into the heart of the female reporter Lisa: "I think of someone."
"Who is it?" asked second casting assistant Anna Moffett immediately.
"Mrs. Emma Eckhert." The female reporter Lisa's eyes exuded an inexplicable admiration: "A female banker."
"Ah..." The leader of the "SA3 Sisters Group" who did his homework when he came, the chief casting assistant field girl Danielle had already thought of: "The heroine of "La banquière", the real world actor is Romy Schneider, the famous female movie star "Princess Sissi".
The story of "The Female Banker" takes place in Paris between 1914 and 1938. The whole city was filled with the atmosphere of political struggle and corruption before World War II. The ordinary girl Emma Eckhert, who was born in the home of clothing shop owners, caught up with the wave of the times and transformed into a wealthy female banker with stocks. She transformed from a notorious bisexual girl into a banking elite and the head of a financial newspaper specializing in public savings, becoming a sensational figure. Money opened up the road to the upper class for Emma, and relied on high interest rates to absorb funds and then transferred to the stock market.
Leigh, Emma quickly left her peers far behind. At the same time, she also met a young and promising parliamentarian and soon fell in love and became her new lover. Emma's outstanding performance soon attracted the jealousy of other bankers. They colluded and hoped to put Emma in jail through legal means. When the parliamentarian's lover learned that Emma was about to face trial, although he immediately distanced himself from her, he was forced to commit suicide in the end. Emma, who was both frustrated in love and business, did not fall into a slump, but relied on her own strength to give heavy counterattacks to those opponents who hoped that she would fall.
Based on the life of Marthe Hanau, a French woman who successfully deceived the French financial market in the 1930s, boldly started from a new perspective of a war-torn woman, allowing the audience to re-examine how people succumb to ugly politics and make the most helpless compromises to survive. The film uses a pseudo-documentary film to record the life of a female banker Emma Eckhet, who was finally killed as a victim of political sacrifice. Based on the reasons that the French think but cannot say in their mouths, the entire French society does not like the female banker Emma Eckhet, who is successful in career: one is a bisexual; the other is a "German (Emma was born in Artsace, mostly German immigrants here); in the end, it is just because she is a woman, but she broke into the banking industry controlled by a man.
"I interviewed her during the 1936 Berlin Olympics." The female reporter Lisa's expression was very complicated.
"How did she do it?" Mrs. Katy is very interested in every "famous woman" who can make a name for herself in the world of fame and fortune.
"At that time, the French bank was disdainful of the deposits of small depositors, so she relied on the principle of treating depositors equally and her high credibility for depositors. She even refused to give them back when she was in jail. She also promised the depositors that interest rate reached 8% is much higher than the 1% high return rate of those large banks (ahem, I said, sir, this seems like a Ponzi scheme!), which made her bank favored by many small depositors, and was also jealous of those French bankers, and finally colluded with politicians to murder her."
"What a pity." Mrs. Katie sighed.
“Just like this great era of war, Emma Eckhet is obviously not a 'good person' in the usual sense. She first married her beautiful same-sex partner, Camille Sowcroft, to a wealthy and powerful man, senior councillor Paul Sistern.
Cisterne, who gained the first pot of gold in life by maintaining an intimate 'triangle relationship' with them, then devoted himself to the media industry, and used the publishing of financial newspapers to guide public opinion for her use. She embezzled the money from depositors to engage in stock trading, and issued a false stock subscription certificate to bribe politicians. In order to build her own financial empire, she even shook hands with the fascist dictator Mussolini. "The female reporter Lisa said more and more: "However, as Emma Eckhet said in prison: 'The bribers were caught, but the bribers were fine.' Like many outstanding women, she was just a victim of an era. So the question is, sisters. Should she be sympathized with?"
"Unless 'sympathy' can become an upward ladder, it is completely unnecessary for me." The female inventor Heidi Rama responded generously.
"Hahaha..." Everyone would laugh when they heard this.
"Is she really dead?" female star Anelise Ackerman asked about the most critical elements of the plot now.
"No." The female reporter who spoke with new plot memories emerged: "Her same-sex partner, Camille Socroft, bribed and bribed the gunman. She shot her intentionally when assassinating her in public. The bullet did not hit the vital point. Afterwards, she and Mrs. Colette Lecoudray, the real wife of the young congressman lover, quietly sent her to Shanghai on a ferry (beautiful, fake death and escape!)."
“Now, Mrs. Emma Eckhet is one of the shareholders behind DWB Shanghai Branch.”
Deutsch-Asiatische
Bank), established in Berlin, Germany on February 12, 1889, is composed of thirteen major German banks. It belongs to the German overseas banking system and is the central institution for German capital activities in China. On January 12, 1890, the Shanghai Branch of Dehua Bank opened with its headquarters address in Shanghai. Its equity capital totaled 7.5 million taels of Shanghai-based silver, 1,000 taels per share, and all dividend distributions are made by Mark. The Qing Empire foreign bonds issued in 1896 - Ying-German Borrowing
In 1898, Deutsche Bank participated in the foreign bonds of the Qing Empire for 16 million pounds - Yingde renewal. In 1899, Deutsche Bank assisted the establishment of the Shandong Railway Company, the foreign bonds of the Qing Empire issued in 1908 - Jinpu Railway loan, and the foreign bonds of the Qing Empire issued in 1910 - Jinpu Railway loan. In the 20 years since its establishment, 20 branches were set up in Hankou, Qingdao, Tianjin, Hong Kong, Jinan, Beiping, Guangzhou and other places.
The Deutsche Bank branch in Hankou was established in 1899; in 1907, it issued banknotes in China one yuan, five yuan, ten yuan, twenty five yuan, fifty yuan silver coupons and one tael, five taels, ten taels and twenty taels silver tickets. In 1913, Deutsche Bank participated in the restructuring of gold loans of the Chinese government for 25 million pounds (511.25 million marks). After the outbreak of World War I in 1914, Deutsche Bank's banknotes could no longer be circulated on the market. 1917
In 2018, my country officially declared war on Germany, and the bank immediately closed down and cleaned up. The branches of Deya Bank in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Hankou, Peking, Tianjin and Jinnan Prefecture were forced to liquidate by the government of the Republic of China. Its Shandong assets were taken away by Japan, and assets other than Shandong branches were taken over by the government. After the end of World War I, the head office branch, except Jinan, resumed business one after another, but its strength was no longer the same as before. It was not until after World War II that the designated banks of the National Government were allowed to be cleaned up.
Chapter completed!