Agrega una trama en tu idiomaMartin Shkreli, a notorious financial entrepreneur and pharmaceutical tycoon from Brooklyn, is portrayed in a documentary as the most hated man in America.Martin Shkreli, a notorious financial entrepreneur and pharmaceutical tycoon from Brooklyn, is portrayed in a documentary as the most hated man in America.Martin Shkreli, a notorious financial entrepreneur and pharmaceutical tycoon from Brooklyn, is portrayed in a documentary as the most hated man in America.
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 3 nominaciones en total
Martin Shkreli
- Self - 'Pharma Bro'
- (material de archivo)
Travis Langley
- Self - Professor of Psychology, Henderson State University
- (as Dr. Travis Langley)
Aaron Kesselheim
- Self - Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
- (as Dr. Aaron Kesselheim)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
I think the title sums it up enough. This director isnt a director, but a stalker who literally moves into Martins building to provide us the viewers no extra info. He than convinces other stalkers to be interviewees in this to provide no extra narration. I hope the lady journalist enjoys her future kids from being a stalker. Sad day in society that this is released as a film.
If you didn't follow the Shkreli story too closely this documentary will bring some interesting parts of it to light, e.g. He constantly livestreamed and took calls from random people. It is mostly about the public scandals surrounding him.
The main journalist who practically stalked Shkreli for a year has nothing meaninful to add. Whilst an interesting angle, nothing came of his efforts and didn't deserve a good chunk of the documentary. Instead he too just got caught up in the public drama and failed to do any meaningful journalism.
The documentary attempts psychoanalysis via the people that knew him personally, however this just ends showing people that keep empathising with him. What about the people that were hurt by his actions?
A question that I wanted answered was "how many people did he kill because people couldn't afford medication?"
Instead you have his friends and ex-girlfriends saying what a sweet misunderstood guy he is; if you ignore the psychopathy he is actually quirky and likeable. The interesting angle here is how various people have failed to apply any ethical standards to their personal relationships. Several women wanted to date him only after he became known as a menace and just ignored his other actions.
Because he was so reviled by everyone the new perspective the documentary is trying to bring is to paint him as "only human". The real discussion to be had is about the US healtcare system and how Shkreli has become a symbol of bad things can get. There's the briefest talk about that.
At the end it's still not clear what is driving Shkreli, other than a desire for quick money, or what makes him so callous.
The main journalist who practically stalked Shkreli for a year has nothing meaninful to add. Whilst an interesting angle, nothing came of his efforts and didn't deserve a good chunk of the documentary. Instead he too just got caught up in the public drama and failed to do any meaningful journalism.
The documentary attempts psychoanalysis via the people that knew him personally, however this just ends showing people that keep empathising with him. What about the people that were hurt by his actions?
A question that I wanted answered was "how many people did he kill because people couldn't afford medication?"
Instead you have his friends and ex-girlfriends saying what a sweet misunderstood guy he is; if you ignore the psychopathy he is actually quirky and likeable. The interesting angle here is how various people have failed to apply any ethical standards to their personal relationships. Several women wanted to date him only after he became known as a menace and just ignored his other actions.
Because he was so reviled by everyone the new perspective the documentary is trying to bring is to paint him as "only human". The real discussion to be had is about the US healtcare system and how Shkreli has become a symbol of bad things can get. There's the briefest talk about that.
At the end it's still not clear what is driving Shkreli, other than a desire for quick money, or what makes him so callous.
Probably not in the sense you are thinking. The guy making the documentary thinks hes trolling martin, but trolling insinuates some sort of 'poking the bear' of sorts. Instead, this 'troll' documentary creator is actually just a shy stalker.
It's played as lighthearted and meant to be endearing, but Brent Hodge, a faux-journalist documentarian, did something that is an example of everything wrong with modern journalism.... he stalked his subject. Not only did he stalk his subject, he didn't even ask any meaningful questions or provide any meaningful insight. Brent Hodge isn't really a great documentarian, he makes long form YouTube videos. You would get more out of watching a ten minute InfoWars analysis on Martin than you would paying $7 on iTunes to watch this BARELY feature length "film"
This documentary is terrible. The "filmmaker" comes off as an obsessed stalker seeking fame. There's nothing new or interesting in this. Glad I caught it streaming free.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 16:9 HD
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