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Enron: The Smartest Guys In The Room / (Ac3 Dol)

Format: DVD (1)
UPC: 0876964000017
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  • SRP (Baht) : 810.00
  • Our Price (Baht) : 579.00
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  • Release Date : 17/01/2006
  • Distributor : Import
  • Genres : Documentary
  • Aspect Ratio : 1.78:1
  • Language : ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
  • Subtitles : Spanish
  • Number of discs : 1
  • Package : Keep Case
  • Rated : R
  • Special Features
  • Feature Commentary with Writer/Director Alex Gibney
    Deleted Scenes
    The Making of Enron: The Smartest Guys In The Room
    Conversations with Bethany McLean and Peter Ilkind
    Firesign Theatre Presents: The Fall Of Enron
    Additional Enron Skits (selections from discovered scripts)
    Higher Definition: The Enron Show
    Where Are They Now?
    A Gallery Of Enron Cartoons
    The Original Fortune magazine articles
    An index of Web Sites with the latest information
  • Credits
    • Actors : Peter Coyote, Michael Lugenbuehl, Reggie Dees II, Bethany McLean, Jim Chanos
    • Directors : Alex Gibney
    • Studio : Magnolia
    • Run Time : 110 mins
    • Synopsis :
      One of the greatest scandals in American corporate history is chronicled in the riveting documentary Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room. Based on the bestselling book by Fortune magazine reporters Bethany McLean and Peter Elkin; and directed by Alex Gibney (who also produced The Trials of Henry Kissinger); the film is an epic morality tale; drawing upon a wealth of insider interviews and archival material to show how Enron; once the nation's seventh largest corporate entity; essentially faked its bookkeeping to report profits that never existed. The corrupt and closely-guarded mismanagement by Enron executives (including Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling; later placed on criminal trial) is revealed through such heinous concepts as "Hypothetical Future Value" (a way of reaping fortunes based on false profit projections) and the use of offshore "shell" companies to hide the massive losses that eventually toppled the company (along with the venerable Arthur Anderson accounting firm) and left 20;000 employees jobless. As a maddening portrait of hubris and white-collar crime; Enron transcends political and corporate boundaries by showing how smart and powerful men grew blinded by greed and brought ruin upon themselves; along with thousands of otherwise innocent victims. For better and worse; it's a perfect double-feature with eye-opening 2004 documentary The Corporation. --Jeff Shannon



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