|
|
|
Search Movie Review
Archives
|
|
|
| |
| Dvdivas
was founded by John Gabbard in 2000. It's purpose has been and
remains to be to provide you, the entertainment community with
the latest dvds and movie reviews. It will continue to be your
link to the most popular dvd movies. |
|
|
|
“Enron:
The Smartest Guys in the Room”
|
|
Reviewer:
|
Wayne
Klein
|
Studio: |
Magnolia |
| Genre: |
Documentary |
Release:
|
2/16/06 |
| Special
Features: |
“We Should All Ask Why?” making
of documentary, “Where Are They Now?”, deleted scenes, clips,
“The Fall of Enron” by the Firesign Theater, cartoons and
original articles, commentary by director Alex Gibney, Company
Skit, Enron commercial Release Date: 2/16/06 |
| Review:
|
Whenever I think too much of our species, how smart,
noble and charitable we are I’m going to watch this movie.
“Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room” is an example of
how blind greed, ambition and lack of ethics guide American
corporate culture. For every Enron there are hundreds of
other companies doing the same thing (bilking consumers
and indirectly causing deaths) that don’t get caught. The
fact that our culture rewards people like this (at least
until they are caught with their hand in the cookie jar)
is a dispiriting recognition of how far we have to go to
reach our potential as a species. ---
Based on Peter Elkind and Bethany McLean’s book of the
same name the documentary catches the crooks in the act
so to speak. We watch the incredible rise of Enron who had
nothing to sell all they literally did was broker power
over the power lines. The Enron scandal is an example of
capitalism gone awry. Ironically the company’s motto in
advertising was “Ask Why?” the only problem was that when
there were rolling blackouts in California and elderly patients
dying due to heat exhaustion no one did until Bethany McLean.
Director Alex Gibney’s film clearly draws a moral line letting
the audience judge for themselves the level of corruption,
deceit and callousness that existed within the company and
how this attitude drove the company to record profits. It’s
not surprising that President George W. Bush and his administration
allowed the watchdogs to fall sleep while the scandal raged
on. ---
Image & Sound:
Shot on digital high definition video and presented
in anamorphic widescreen the picture quality is very good
with a crisp and clear quality comparable to film. There
were digital artifacts that would crop up now and again
such as macroblocking and video noise but, on the whole,
the image quality crisp, clear with nice natural rich colors
shining through. The 5.1 format isn’t an ideal format for
documentaries by their very nature but the format is nicely
used here. Dialogue came across crisp and clear and there
wasn’t any audible distortion that I could detect. ---
|
| Special
Features: |
“We Should All Ask Why?” is an excellent documentary
on the making of the documentary that details how the filmmakers
overcame the challenge of creating a dry documentary engaging
and entertaining film. We also have a gallery of Enron cartoons
and the original “Fortune” magazine articles written by
McLean as well as trailers for the film. Also included are
interviews with authors McLean and Elkin and a rogue's gallery
presented in “Where Are They Now?” focusing on the Enron
executives who masterminded this deception. Director Gibney
reads the script from a video that Enron made which is pretty
scary. We get to see deleted scenes including clips of Enron
CEO Kenneth Lay’s day in court. For the record, death was
too good for Kenneth Lay. ***
The commentary to me was the highlight with director
Gibney giving a terrific overview of the making of the film.
Additionally, Gibney discusses the extensive research and
pruning process he went through when it came to deciding
which interviews to include and what to edit. Gibney was
acutely aware of the criticism he might face on a biased
film and made sure to verify information and use proof sources
in the actual film where possible. ---
|
|
Final Words:
|
An excellent documentary that
highlights how corporate executives can be as nasty, corrupt
and downright evil as despot leaders of countries, “Enron”
is an excellent cautionary tale. Unfortunately, I doubt that
Washington is truly listening or watching so we can expect
all this in one form or another to occur all over again. The
question is will people suffer and die due to the negligence
of our leaders. |
|
|