The Crooked E: The Unshredded Truth About Enron
- Fernsehfilm
- 2003
- 1 Std. 40 Min.
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe rise and fall of the Enron company, as seen from the perspective of employee Brian Cruver, based on his book.The rise and fall of the Enron company, as seen from the perspective of employee Brian Cruver, based on his book.The rise and fall of the Enron company, as seen from the perspective of employee Brian Cruver, based on his book.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Liz Perry
- (as Nancy Sakovich)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The true story is itself an utter outrage and watching the movie I felt it did capture, at least the feeling of what it was like to be an enron employee and it also managed to convey the idealistic dreams so many had going into the company. It is HARD for me to review this movie for the very reason that I just don't know how accurate and true to life it was. I never worked for Enron or knew anyone who did but I have known people who were motivated by little more then greed in life-still I don't know why there was a love story gone wrong plot going on as well, I don't even know if the main character in this movie actually existed.
And though the movie did show a typical working day in an Enron employee's life I would have liked it to go into more depth about the ramifications of what happened and how it effected so manys' lives in really tragic ways. Of coarse we all know the story but I'd perhaps have liked to see interviews with REAL Enron employees, these incredible people who put so much of their lives into their work and were hurt so badly by individuals whose only motive was money. It is sad, it is tragic and even though I'm not sure about the accuracy of anything about the movie, it was so fast paced and involving, my attention WAS held almost automatically by the movie in general(it's the only movie I've seen on the Enron scandel and it keeps you watching). But I still think some things should have been different and rather then this one guy's relationship with his wife, the movie should have had real life interviews. The movie touched me but something tells me the real life ramifications of the Enron scandel were about quintuple what the movie showed. I would also have liked to have seen what the law was doing to punish the people responsible for this and how some of the people who lost so much were doing now.
I knew someone who worked at Enron. She started out as a secretary but was very happy to have worked her way into the banking and investment side of the company. That was about a year before the company collapsed and I'd lost touch with her, but I've often wondered how she ended up. If she landed on her feet. I never knew her well, don't have her contact info.
There are probably a thousand stories about individual employees at Enron and how this changed things for them. It's hard to feel sorry for the individuals, when the investors were the real victims, but employees have stories too.
This made for TV movie, which I saw when it came out, was barely adequate. I made it through, but I didn't find it impressive. The Smartest Men in the Room is a far better and much more complete story about Enron.
Christian Kane has the momentous job of playing Cruver, as he appears in every scene except for a prologue which shows him as a child with "Mr. Blue," Brian Dennehey. He also does the narration and has a brief song while driving his new Lexus. And he does it all with dash and aplomb. If this very handsome, talented young actor, whom the camera loves, is not a superstar in the next couple of years, there is something radically wrong. Tony winner Dennehey is outstanding as an employee with a sad story to tell, and Mike Farrell presents Ken Lay as either an eternal optimist or a bald-faced liar or some of both.
I hope this will eventually come out on video or DVD as it's a keeper.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe real Brian Cruver, whose book inspired the movie, said the movie was very accurate to his experiences working at Enron, with two exceptions: he felt the movie overemphasized the hiring of former strippers as secretaries and assistants, and that the Enron company party showed in the film was very tame compared to the actual company's rallies.
- Zitate
Brian Cruver: [Narrating the epilogue] Others at Enron responded more... openly to the call for disclosure. Dream became reality when Playboy presented "The Women of Enron," and then, Playgirl responded with "The Men of Enron." Bickers? Well, he left Wall Street and found something a little more...
[Pictures are shown of Bickers as a blackjack dealer in Las Vegas]
Brian Cruver: secure. Duffy returned his family to San Francisco. Liz found another marketing job.
[Pictures of Liz having her Enron "E" tattoo removed from her breast]
Brian Cruver: And she managed to put the E behind her. Anne-Marie's expecting to start college full-time.
[Pictures of Anne-Marie working as a waitress]
Brian Cruver: . In a year or two. Out of all of our team, McLainey lost the most, but we have no doubt he will land on his feet. Even Lazarri survived. Sort of.
Lazarri: [Cuts to Lazarri at his new job] But, you know what? I know I'm gonna love it here at WorldCom!
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 40 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.33 : 1