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Addiction Incorporated

  • 2011
  • PG
  • 1 Std. 40 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
132
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Addiction Incorporated (2011)
When a young drug researcher is hired by a tobacco company, Victor DeNoble unexpectedly discovers the ingredients of addiction and fuels a national campaign to have it regulated.
trailer wiedergeben2:12
1 Video
1 Foto
BiographieDokumentarfilm

Als ein junger Drogenforscher von einem Tabakunternehmen angeheuert wird, entdeckt Victor DeNoble unerwartet die Inhaltsstoffe der Sucht und treibt eine landesweite Kampagne für deren Reguli... Alles lesenAls ein junger Drogenforscher von einem Tabakunternehmen angeheuert wird, entdeckt Victor DeNoble unerwartet die Inhaltsstoffe der Sucht und treibt eine landesweite Kampagne für deren Regulierung an.Als ein junger Drogenforscher von einem Tabakunternehmen angeheuert wird, entdeckt Victor DeNoble unerwartet die Inhaltsstoffe der Sucht und treibt eine landesweite Kampagne für deren Regulierung an.

  • Regie
    • Charles Evans Jr.
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Danny Abel
    • Phil Barnett
    • Neal Benowitz
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,1/10
    132
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Charles Evans Jr.
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Danny Abel
      • Phil Barnett
      • Neal Benowitz
    • 4Benutzerrezensionen
    • 10Kritische Rezensionen
    • 68Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 2:12
    U.S. Version

    Fotos

    Topbesetzung90

    Ändern
    Danny Abel
    • Self - Interviewee
    Phil Barnett
    • Self - Interviewee
    Neal Benowitz
    • Self - Interviewee
    Herbert Barry III
    • Self - Interviewee
    Walt Bogdanich
    Walt Bogdanich
    • Self - Interviewee
    Joe Bruno
    Joe Bruno
    • Self - Interviewee
    John P. Coale
    • Self - Interviewee
    • (as John Coale)
    Greg Connolly
    • Self - Interviewee
    Camela DeNoble
    • Self - Interviewee
    Carol DeNoble
    • Self - Interviewee
    Kimi DeNoble
    • Self - Interviewee
    Victor DeNoble
    • Self - Interviewee
    Cliff Douglas
    • Self - Interviewee
    Thomas Doyle
    • Self - Interviewee
    Marc Edell
    • Self - Interviewee
    Sharon Eubanks
    • Self - Interviewee
    William Farone
    • Self - Interviewee
    Jack Henningfield
    • Self - Interviewee
    • Regie
      • Charles Evans Jr.
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen4

    7,1132
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    5j238

    A Shallow Look at the Tobacco Industry

    This film covers a huge number of tobacco topics going ankle-deep on each one, while providing the audience with a mini-biography of scientist Victor DeNoble. The weaselly libel suit against ABC is mentioned in a manner missing all details. Dr. DeNoble is shown opposing the multi-state settlement, but his reasons are not presented. Congressman Ron Wyden appears as a tobacco opponent without disclosure that he ultimately sold-out the cause via the industry- friendly Rose-Wyden "compromise". Philip Morris' Steve Parrish was interviewed for the film and is portrayed uncritically as the architect of the ostensible reforms of the tobacco industry.

    Of course, it's impossible to include every possible detail about your subject in a documentary with a standard runtime, but consider this. I don't remember hearing the word "cancer" once in this documentary about the tobacco industry.
    JohnDeSando

    Entertaining and Instructive

    Victor DeNoble of the documentary Addiction Incorporated is no whistle-blowing Jeffery Wigand (Russell Crowe) of the biopic Insider (1999). While DeNoble starts as a scientist and ends up an adversary of big tobacco, Wigand evolved more slowly and less stridently into a whistle-blower hero.

    DeNoble is a scientist who could have been an actor, a robust man of definite opinions who has none of Wigand's reservations about facing down big tobacco once he realized what he had discovered and how the companies could extend the addiction because of the discovery.

    Having found the addictive element in tobacco, DeNoble (not unlike the promise of his last name) courageously exposes the killer in articulate moves that play less stridently than for Wigand. As the congressional hearings in the 90's move toward a settlement against the industry, DeNoble becomes both a pariah and a cult hero, teaching young people the dangers of smoking from a guy who discovered the link between tobacco and the pleasure center of the brain.

    The talking-head testimonial segments are unobtrusive and organic, less artificial than in most documentaries. Nor is DeNoble held up as pitiable because of tobacco's discrediting techniques. He's a dignified, authentic hero responsible for saving countless lives by teaching and entertaining in an instructive documentary that's one of the best ever.
    7StevePulaski

    A fairly necessary reminder of a story we think we know entirely

    I write this review of the documentary Addiction Incorporated as not only a casual smoker of both cigarettes and cigars myself, but as someone fascinated by the variety of tobacco and tobacco-related products in the United States. Ever since I turned eighteen, I've been a casual smoker, smoking no more than three cigarettes a day, researching on tobacco trends and specifics of particular cigarettes and cigars, while frequenting tobacco shops and lounges with my friends. It's a culture that's attractive because of its variety, history, and stigma, especially in recent time. I distinctly remember being a young child going into Red Lobster or another restaurant and having my mother, a smoker for several decades, and my grandmother, another smoker for several decades before quitting in the late 2000's, asking for a "smoking table." Now, you'll be lucky to smoke immediately outside of that same building.

    Addiction Incorporated is a documentary about tobacco losing its respectable place and staple in American culture. What was once a proud staple of unabashed freedom and Americana has now become viewed as a gross habit with seriously lethal consequences, with concrete evidence and support to back up such statements. It concerns a man named Victor DeNoble, with a cool demeanor and relaxing narrative voice that was made for any documentary, who was hired by Philip Morris several decades ago to develop an equally addictive substitute for nicotine. This was during the time that companies like Morris (Marlboro) and R.J. Reynolds (Camel) were beginning to succumb to proof from studies that a correlation between cigarette smoking and lung cancer was undeniable and prevalent. Nonetheless, even DeNoble himself confirms that they did want to develop an alternative to nicotine. After all, as stated in the documentary, dead smokers don't buy cigarettes.

    DeNoble worked with a man named Bill Farone to help develop the substitute, but during this process, DeNoble worked with lab-rats as he worked to discover what nicotine really does to the brain. In DeNoble's experiment, rats were given doses of nicotine to their brain respective to their body-size whenever they pressed a button. Eventually, over the course of just a few days, the rats went from pushing the button just a few times a day to pushing it over one-hundred times a day. After this discovery, the evidence was indisputable; nicotine did dangerous things to the brain and was delivered by way of one of America's favorite social activities and passtimes.

    We're told when nicotine enters the body, it directly affects a person's breathing as well as their heart-rate. It also is something that has to be introduced to the body; once acquainted, it activates nerves and emotions in the brain that weren't previously known to the body, which is what results in a sudden craving for a cigarette and the ongoing addiction. DeNoble was also one of the first people to look at acetaldehyde, a chemical that serves as one of the key factors in getting nicotine to resonate in the body and the mind. With that, DeNoble looked to present his research to the tobacco companies, who, regardless of the scientific findings, had two prime goals - sell more cigarettes and make more money.

    DeNoble states that while companies like Philip Morris were selling a lifestyle, they were really engaging drug marketing. They were engaging in normalizing drug use in popular culture, where people could regularly purchase and use a legal drug while skeptically observing or writing off others perceived as "more dangerous" or "more deadly." The anomaly such a thing presents is quite striking, but DeNoble reminds us of a time where Americans refused to accept that one of their favorite, more cherished things was slowly killing them and turning them into addicts.

    Addiction Incorporated covers all that and more, including the long legal battle between DeNoble and Philip Morris that famously had the tobacco company denying any prior knowledge that their product lead to a variety of diseases and resulted in a countless number of deaths. Curiously enough, I don't recall the word "cancer" being uttered once in the film; that's because the focus is largely on DeNoble, his findings, and Philip Morris's response to those findings. As a result, Addiction Incorporated winds up being a documentary that retraces well-covered steps, but nonetheless basks in an aura of importance with an engaging presence and understandable storytelling devices at its core. It doesn't predicate on fear, but on proved sentiments and winds up being thoroughly enjoyable and informative at that.

    Directed by: Charles Evans Jr.
    7StrictlyConfidential

    A Serious Wake-Up Call To The Hazards Of Smoking

    Whether you are addicted to nicotine, or not - This anti-smoking documentary is certainly well-worth a view for all that it brings to light in regards to cigarette fixation and the misleading role that the tobacco companies have taken in all of this "health hazardous" controversy.

    In "Addiction Incorporated" we meet research scientist, Victor DeNoble who (while working for Philip Morris Inc. back in 1980) discovered that nicotine was highly addictive (and, yet, his employers sought to suppress this important find and not inform the public).

    I certainly hope that a documentary like this one will wake a lot of smokers up and seriously encourage them to kick this nasty habit for good.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Was originally Rated PG-13 by the MPAA for "brief language" but was later edited to achieve a PG rated for "thematic material involving smoking and addiction, and for some language."

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 14. Oktober 2011 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Official site
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Acappella Pictures
      • Dune Road Films
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 40.106 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 1.629 $
      • 18. Dez. 2011
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 40.106 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

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      • 1 Std. 40 Min.(100 min)
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