A new documentary, Abacus: Small Enough to Jail, is about the only bank to be criminally prosecuted for mortgage fraud in the 2008 financial meltdown. It just happened to also be the only bank not politically well-connected or defended by an army of lawyers, an example of how regulation favors the big guys. As a little bank, it just didn’t have, i.e., hadn’t purchased, the cozy relationship larger banks had with the Obama Administration or the Clintons. The film is getting good reviews. Says Screen Daily: “In its intimate, well-observed way, the film is deeply moving and subtly shaming.” Says RogertEbert.com: “The central figure in James’ Abacus: Small Enough to Jail, Thomas Sung, decided he wanted to be a banker when he saw It’s a Wonderful Life. Frank Capra’s vision of a leader of a community by virtue of his support, both financial and emotional, inspired Sung, and James’ brilliantly uses the film as a thematic through line for his story of a George Bailey who stands up to a corrupt, flawed system.”