IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
2546
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Der Finanzdienstleister Wirecard verschlug der Branche mit seinem kometenhaften Aufstieg die Sprache. Doch dann enthüllte ein Team hartnäckiger Journalisten Betrug in großem Stil.Der Finanzdienstleister Wirecard verschlug der Branche mit seinem kometenhaften Aufstieg die Sprache. Doch dann enthüllte ein Team hartnäckiger Journalisten Betrug in großem Stil.Der Finanzdienstleister Wirecard verschlug der Branche mit seinem kometenhaften Aufstieg die Sprache. Doch dann enthüllte ein Team hartnäckiger Journalisten Betrug in großem Stil.
Jan Marsalek
- Self - Chief Operating Officer, Wirecard AG
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Edo Kurniawan
- Self - Head of Accounting, Wirecard Singapore
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I had read about the reports that Dan McCrum published in the FT concerning Wirecard's nefarious activities, but didn't know the intricate details apart from the fact that he was put under immense pressure to retract his accusations both by Wirecard themselves (using lawyers and spooks), and by the German financial authorities.
This excellent documentary shows just how far the German authorities went to protect Wirecard because it was a home grown FinTech success story which blinded them to the fact that it was committing fraud on a massive scale.
The information I didn't know was how Russia was involved and why the company was founded in the first place.
Absolutely amazing documentary which shows just how far Russia had infiltrated into the German financial system, and I can guess into the London financial system too.
This excellent documentary shows just how far the German authorities went to protect Wirecard because it was a home grown FinTech success story which blinded them to the fact that it was committing fraud on a massive scale.
The information I didn't know was how Russia was involved and why the company was founded in the first place.
Absolutely amazing documentary which shows just how far Russia had infiltrated into the German financial system, and I can guess into the London financial system too.
If you want to know the reason why people hate short sellers this film will give you a good idea. The cartoon character in his Cannes pile bemoaning what he didn't make by literally doing nothing is a perfect example. Their's, and the journalists glee at bringing down a company that employed thousands of people, and hundreds of thousands of investors, is quite hard to stomach. No doubt the company was dodgy to say the least but neither party were working for the good of mankind. The short sellers thinking only of the profit to be made by destroying the business, and the journalists revenge for having the tables turned on them. As a film it's well made and if you don't know the story worth the effort, personally I can't get over the unsurpassed delight at seeing the business fail.
All credit to Dan and the FT management for staying with a story even the German financial authorities tried to kill. Tenacious research and following of leads in Asia and Europe inspite of threats legal and otherwise reveals a real life financial scandal at one of Germanys largest companies. Fascinating insight into the world of short sells - not a very attractive bunch outside of two focuses American ladies who with others help lift the thick veil of secrecy of the fraudsters. Beats most financial dramas into small corner and makes you aware of the abilities of a determined fraudster to nearly make it even the German chancellor 'supported the company. Great insight into the talent and doggedness of a journalist never prepared to give up and of an editor prepared to take huge risks to get the story.
... well not Benjamins, since it is German (european) money ... but you get what I am trying to recreate ... so no pun intended. The documentary is very well researched ... and who would have thought that the Germans are able to run a scheme like that.
A current president would probably pardon them all - if the crimes were committed in his land ... just saying. The brazenness was only possible, because no one thought that they would be ... well so brazen. Also Germany ... many here apparently felt that the country itself was being attacked when reporters were trying to uncover the truth.
Wild story for sure ... where is that mattress to put your money in you may be thinking ... well hopefully not as bad as that ... money needs to keep flowing.
A current president would probably pardon them all - if the crimes were committed in his land ... just saying. The brazenness was only possible, because no one thought that they would be ... well so brazen. Also Germany ... many here apparently felt that the country itself was being attacked when reporters were trying to uncover the truth.
Wild story for sure ... where is that mattress to put your money in you may be thinking ... well hopefully not as bad as that ... money needs to keep flowing.
There have been many documentaries & films over the past decade on the financial industry trying to give outsiders a glimpse into their usually mundane world, only to find that sometimes when they get it wrong it really is mammoth in proportions. In this case, we have a fascinating look into the world of now defunct German company Wirecard, which was pure criminal fraud right front of all our eyes, yet few even an eyelid, with there being either only some mavericks "shorting" them or a few genuine brave investigators. We have tales of politicians, financial gurus, outside investors, stock traders and one very brave FT newspaper journalist; all talking heads taking us through the machinations of this catastrophe.
What this doc does well is help to explain the ins & outs of the company, but also show the shere scale of the corruption underlying this company. Yet everyone was fawning over it, and clearly a blind eye was turned by everyone. It took some brave reporting despite the threats to reveal the truth.
However, I feel that this documentary is a little watered down. I guess for legal reasons there were more targets & names they could have attacked but didn't which is a shame, as at the end only a couple of names seem to be blamed when really there are plenty of more guilty parties involved. That lets it down but not enough to knock the film off the tracks.
As an introduction to the 'skandal' it's a fine start, but really I think something more meaty is required to forensically investigate all that took place. There may still be other "Wirecard" companies out there which we are all blind to!
What this doc does well is help to explain the ins & outs of the company, but also show the shere scale of the corruption underlying this company. Yet everyone was fawning over it, and clearly a blind eye was turned by everyone. It took some brave reporting despite the threats to reveal the truth.
However, I feel that this documentary is a little watered down. I guess for legal reasons there were more targets & names they could have attacked but didn't which is a shame, as at the end only a couple of names seem to be blamed when really there are plenty of more guilty parties involved. That lets it down but not enough to knock the film off the tracks.
As an introduction to the 'skandal' it's a fine start, but really I think something more meaty is required to forensically investigate all that took place. There may still be other "Wirecard" companies out there which we are all blind to!
Wusstest du schon
- Zitate
Ending line: In November 2020, Dan McCrum was awarded the highest prize for investigative journalism in Germany.
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
- How long is Skandal! Bringing Down Wirecard?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- الفضيحة: الإطاحة بشركة وايركارد
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 32 Min.(92 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen