Enron - The Smartest Guys in the Room (2002)
Facts
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Enron - The Smartest Guys in the Room [Blu-ray]
DVD Price: You save 33%! As of Oct 7 22:06 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | Alex Gibney |
| Cast | Peter Coyote, Michael Lugenbuehl, Reggie Dees II, Bethany McLean and Jim Chanos |
| Theatrical Release | October 11, 2002 |
| DVD Release | September 25, 2006 |
| Running Time | 110 minutes |
| Disc Type | |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 876964000475 |
| Buy this item | $19.95 at Amazon.com As of Oct 7 22:06 EDT (details) 1 Blu-ray, MAGNOLIA HOME ENTERTAINMENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 20 new from $19.95, 7 used from $12.90, 1 collectible from $29.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Lions for Lambs |
"Enron" shows the consequences of following Gordon Gecko's "Greed is good" motto. Lay, Skilling, and his associates began to consider themselves above the law. They created artificial shortages and rolling blackouts. In one chilling scene,employees laugh about leaving a grandmother in the dark while shaking her down for money. There was undisciplined speculation, business at its worst. While the movie plays up Enron's connections with the Bush family, Enron also had Democratic connections,and Democratic California governor Gray Davis let them get away with highway robbery.
When people talk about the hikes in oil prices as "Enronesque",this documentary shows why. Enron played the system... and it paid. What goes around comes around. June 26, 2008
| Worthy of Euripides- A True American Tradgedy. |
Enron, named one of "America's Most Innovative Companies" by Fortune magazine for six consecutive years, from 1996 to 2001. On the Fortune's "100 Best Companies to Work for in America" list in 2000. Reported 111 Billion in earnings that same year. Purportedly one of the ten most valuable American corporations, throughout the Nineties. Audited by Arther Andersen, the oldest and one of the most respected accounting firms in the country. Touted and endorsed by nearly all the biggest Wall Street brokers, backed by all the biggest international banks. Called the most important and cutting edge energy trading firm in the world. A halcyon of the new economy, champion of globalism, huge contributer to politicians both Democratic and Republican, but most especially the Bush family dynasty (largest single corporate contributor to George W. Bush's 2000 campaign)..
Just evaporated, imploded seamlessly in upon itself in late 2001.
Other events later in that year naturally distracted us all from what would have otherwise been the singular most important story of that year.. Much to the relief of many in Washington, and on Wall Street.
So it seems that the significance of what happened never really set into the public consciousness.
This film will recollect your mind, and help you understand. I say every American needs to meditate on this story, most especially as it now seems that it may not be the odd aberration that most of our political and financial elites then claimed.
I was living in Monterey, California during the time. During the oh so odd rolling blackouts that killed so many traffic lights, air conditioners, and life support apparatuses.. along with some of the poor people that depended on them.. It was the same summer it seemed that half the state was on fire. Warm Corona in the fridge, Apocalypse in the air..
Ah, Good Times..
This film unsparingly reveals who was really behind that catastrophe. Here - amongst many other astounding things - you'll hear tapes of the Enron energy traders (like their colleagues in other energy companies) as they deliberately manipulate the power grid, shutting down power plants at peak demand, thereby driving up electricity prices and blacking out large parts of the state, all the while watching the havoc they make.. and laughing about it. All as their company, along with the pensions funds of tens of thousands of ordinary employees, was collapsing around them.
Enron: True Champions of Deregulation. Pihranas in the kiddie pool. Nihilists, with with no thought of the people they were harming, their only thought on the billions they made off the public's soaring utility bills. All as they were going bankrupt. True black comedy.
The thing is that that this story, all the irresponsible greed and corruption, is supposed to have been localized. It was "only" Enron, World Com, and Tyco that were led by the bad apples. Remember President Bush assuring us? And Congress rushing to pass all those new, tough accounting laws?
Get this film, pop some corn, snuggle up on the couch, and push play.
Watch this, think about about it, and wonder. Do you believe them? Do you still trust them?
As a great American orator once put it "Fool me once, shame on -- shame on you. Fool me -- you can't get fooled again."
Yeah, right. Ain't that the truth.
April 24, 2008
| Unfettered Hubris Drives Intriguing Account of Enron Scandal |
What resonates most from this searing film is how circumstantially pathological the chief villains are in this true corporate morality story. While the infamous Ken Lay comes across as the corrupt figurehead we have already come to know through news reports, it's really Enron CFO Andy Fastow (dubbed appropriately "The Sorcerer's Apprentice") and especially President and COO Jeff Skilling, who are mercilessly exposed here. Skilling is portrayed as a brilliant leader and a corporate Darwinist, whose favorite book is Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene, which he apparently translated into a bloodless performance review policy that worked like a genetic algorithm for people. Employees were rated on a 1-5 scale based on the amount of money one made for the company. Skilling mandated that between 10-15% of employees had to be rated as 5's (worst). And to get a rating of 5 meant that one was immediately fired. This review process was dubbed "rank and yank". Such was a typical example of his survivalist thinking.
The corruption spread throughout the company, as Enron was responsible for, among other things, gaming the Northern California "rolling blackouts" in 2001, whereby the company profited as huge parts of the state were plunged into darkness. Citizens were threatened by a deregulation plan that essentially enabled a number of immoral Enron traders (led by Tim Belden) to place calls that drove up energy-market prices and took advantage of power-plant shutdowns. Of course, the Bush family dynasty does not come across unscathed in the Enron story and justifiably so according to their inextricable ties to Lay. Gibney effectively uses video footage from testimony at congressional hearings, as well as interviews with disillusioned former employees such as Mike Muckleroy and whistle-blower Sherron Watkins (who uses some effective pop culture references like Body Heat and Jonestown to get her points across).
There are some amusing vignettes and images that tie some of the disparate elements together with excessive glibness. The documentary is best when it sticks to the facts, for this is one inarguable case where fact is truly stranger than fiction. Extras are plentiful on the 2006 DVD. Gibney provides an informative albeit verbose commentary track, and four deleted scenes, about twenty minutes in total, are included that become redundant with the film's portrayal of corporate malfeasance. There is also a fourteen-minute making-of featurette, as well as a "Where Are They Now?" snippet on the principals and three separate conversations with McLean and Elkind on how they got the story, how they validated their findings, and their enthusiastic reaction to the film. Other bonus materials include Gibney reading from scripts of skits performed at Enron and a Firesign Theater sketch about Enron's demise, as well as Fortune Magazine articles written by McLean and Elkind and a gallery of editorial cartoons. April 9, 2008
| Finally, a logical and watchable explanation |
| very good |
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