[Gibney] tells a complex story well, explaining how one once-obscure company ended up committing 'the corporate crime of the century.'
Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:116
Fresh:113
Rotten:3
Average Rating:8.1/10
Consensus: A concise, entertaining documentary about the spectacular failure of Enron.
Theatrical Release:Apr 22, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $3,886,956
Synopsis: This searing examination of the Enron accounting scandal reveals the psychology of greed and corporate corruption that facilitated the company's rise to power and also its fall. When Enron went... This searing examination of the Enron accounting scandal reveals the psychology of greed and corporate corruption that facilitated the company's rise to power and also its fall. When Enron went bankrupt in 2001, the principals walked away millionaires--but later faced legal proceedings and jail sentences. Meanwhile, many employees and investors were left with nothing, not even their 401k retirement savings. Shedding light on the new economy of the 1990s when predictions and book-cooking flourished without actual profits, the film shows how it was not Enron alone but a network of bankers, traders, and accountants who turned a blind eye to the company's clearly suspicious numbers. CEO Ken Lay and top dogs Jeff Skilling and Andy Fastow give candid interviews that illustrate their skill at deflecting hard questions and egotistically boasting about the company's success. In one of the company's cold and calculated moves--which caused the California power outages, and lead to the ousting of governor Gray Davis--Enron employees are shown laughing at forest fires. Unbelievable footage of employees reveals unbridled greed, lust for risk-taking, and guiltless cheating, all while thinking they could never be caught. Finally, a few brave whistle-blowers stepped forward, including Bethany McLean, author of the Enron novel upon which this film is based, who wrote an article in Fortune magazine calling the company's bluff. A remarkable documentary which packages the events of the scandal into a cohesive story, this is one film not to miss. This film screened in the 2005 SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas. [More]
Director: Alex Gibney
Director: Alex Gibney
Screenwriter: Alex Gibney
Producer: Joana Vicente, Jason Kliot
Studio: Magnolia Pictures
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Reviews for Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room
A thoroughly fascinating -- and horrifying -- documentary about the giant corporate house of cards that came crashing down on the heads of all the little people while the big guys cashed out for mega-millions, smirking all the way.
Before the financial fact findings become mind-numbing, [director]Gibney keeps the images flowing, even tossing in some T & A for good measure.
Alex Gibney's documentary based on the book is pretty much straight-ahead journalism
The story is fascinating, infuriating and even laugh-out-loud funny at times.
It's a gripping, frequently infuriating story of greed, hubris and 'creative' accounting that unfolds as a tragedy laced with scathing black comedy.
Taking an approach that owes more to Errol Morris than Michael Moore, Alex Gibney's film delivers a polished & well-researched look at America 's largest corporate bankruptcy.
Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room is not only a great cautionary tale, it's a civics lesson that should be seen by every concerned citizen.
Gibney, however, is no Michael Moore -- he knows the difference between hard facts and circumstantial evidence, constructing very different arguments with each.
Alex Gibney's riveting documentary is a rape story, with the public trust as the victim.
This cinematic scrutiny of runaway corporate greed reveals the nightmarish rapaciousness of those who engineered the fraud.
This sober, informative chronicle of the biggest business scandal of the decade is almost indecently entertaining.
As real-life stories go, this is as riveting -- and as revealing about the dark side of American business -- as they come.
Amid the infoglut that surrounds us, Gibney's film feels too much like more noise.
An engrossing parable about power, greed, arrogance, and ethical malfeasance on a grand scale.
The Smartest Guys in the Room lays bare, in funny and shocking video clips, the culture of arrogance at Enron.
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