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IMDbPro

The Inventor: Out for Blood in Silicon Valley

  • 2019
  • TV-14
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
16K
YOUR RATING
Elizabeth Holmes in The Inventor: Out for Blood in Silicon Valley (2019)
A documentary about the rise and fall of Theranos, the one-time multibillion-dollar healthcare company founded by Elizabeth Holmes.
Play trailer2:08
2 Videos
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Crime DocumentaryCrimeDocumentary

The story of Theranos, a multi-billion dollar tech company, its founder Elizabeth Holmes, the youngest self-made female billionaire, and the massive fraud that collapsed the company.The story of Theranos, a multi-billion dollar tech company, its founder Elizabeth Holmes, the youngest self-made female billionaire, and the massive fraud that collapsed the company.The story of Theranos, a multi-billion dollar tech company, its founder Elizabeth Holmes, the youngest self-made female billionaire, and the massive fraud that collapsed the company.

  • Director
    • Alex Gibney
  • Writer
    • Alex Gibney
  • Stars
    • Alex Gibney
    • Elizabeth Holmes
    • Dan Ariely
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    16K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alex Gibney
    • Writer
      • Alex Gibney
    • Stars
      • Alex Gibney
      • Elizabeth Holmes
      • Dan Ariely
    • 83User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
    • 66Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:08
    Official Trailer
    The Inventor: Out For Blood In Silicon Valley: How Did She Do That?
    Clip 1:29
    The Inventor: Out For Blood In Silicon Valley: How Did She Do That?
    The Inventor: Out For Blood In Silicon Valley: How Did She Do That?
    Clip 1:29
    The Inventor: Out For Blood In Silicon Valley: How Did She Do That?

    Photos16

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    Top cast49

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    Alex Gibney
    Alex Gibney
    • Self - Interviewer
    • (voice)
    Elizabeth Holmes
    Elizabeth Holmes
    • Self - CEO and Founder of Theranos
    • (archive footage)
    Dan Ariely
    Dan Ariely
    • Self - Behavioral Economist
    Roger Parloff
    Roger Parloff
    • Self - Fortune
    Ken Auletta
    Ken Auletta
    • Self - The New Yorker
    Erika Cheung
    Erika Cheung
    • Self - Lab Associate
    Cheryl Gafner
    Cheryl Gafner
    • Self - Receptionist
    Dave Philippides
    Dave Philippides
    • Self
    • (as Dave Philippide)
    Douglas Matje
    Douglas Matje
    • Self - Biochemist
    Ryan Wistort
    Ryan Wistort
    • Self - Research & Development
    Tony Nugent
    Tony Nugent
    • Self - Vice President, Product Development
    Phyllis Gardner
    Phyllis Gardner
    • Self - Professor of Medicine, Stanford University
    Channing Robertson
    Channing Robertson
    • Self - Theranos Advisor
    Don Lucas
    Don Lucas
    • Self - Investor
    Tim Draper
    Tim Draper
    • Self - Investor
    Tyler Shultz
    Tyler Shultz
    • Self - Research Engineer
    Ramesh Balwani
    Ramesh Balwani
    • Self - President and Chief Operating Officer
    • (as Sunny Balwani)
    Rochelle Gibbons
    Rochelle Gibbons
    • Self - Wife of Ian Gibbons
    • Director
      • Alex Gibney
    • Writer
      • Alex Gibney
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews83

    7.215.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7masonfisk

    NOT SO MUCH AN INVENTOR BUT A BENDER OF TRUTH...!

    Currently airing on HBO, this film by master documentarian Alex Gibney (The Armstrong Lie/Taxi to the Dark Side) explores the pervasive 'fake it till you make it' ethos which much of the dotcom enterprises have undertaken in order to gain funding for their big idea even though sometimes, as in this doc's case, there is no product delivered at the end of the day. Elizabeth Holmes wanted to create a revolutionary device which by using a person's blood (from a finger prick) could examine & determine any maladies or characteristics for medical use at a fraction of what the big labs charge today. Not having any successfully manufactured tangible device to use, the results of the initial tests performed on patients were skewed & problematic even though Walgreen's had bought into their new tech setting up wellness centers in Arizona before rolling them out nationwide. Aligning herself w/big money & hopeful investors, Holmes, along w/her partner & significant other, continued to ratchet up the success of their non-existent product to the public much to the chagrin of employees who knew the truth all along & eventually whistleblowed the entire scheme to the press. A worthy case of believing in the product rather than the producer is made when we see avarice & arrogance go hand in hand to a potentially devastating result.
    8phd_travel

    She did blink, once!

    For those who have been unable to read the book Bad Blood about Theranos, this HBO documentary can help get you up to date on how the unimaginable happened. It's also easier to understand and remember the the events and people visually.

    Visually this is a pretty clear and thorough depiction of the events. Clever blending of her walking around the office. It's nice to see the whistleblowers Tyler and Erika. And on the flip side Sunny Balwani the guy who helped sell the con.

    Some faults. There are a few slower moments that could have been edited out. Some of the people who gave interviews were not that interesting. A lot of laughing by the interviewees. Too many shots of her scary stare, but she did blink once!

    Looking forward to the movie with Jennifer Lawrence. It's good to watch this documentary before the movie comes out because movies can be confusing and it can be tough to figure out who is who.
    8gbill-74877

    A chilling portrait

    A very solid documentary, and one that hits close to home for me, so I really appreciated the depth Alex Gibney provided. I have to say first that Erika Cheung is a true hero and such an admirable person. She wanted to dream the dream but remained honest to the engineering and what the data was telling her. Tyler Schultz too. They are just kids really, and the pressure they faced was enormous, and interestingly enough Schultz's elderly grandfather George (former statesman) was a part of the problem. The documentary also shows us (yet again) the importance of a free press, and the interviews with the Wall Street Journal reporter (John Carreyrou) were one of my favorite parts, along with the commentary from behavioral scientist Dan Ariely. The footage that Gibney gets from company meetings is fantastic. I also loved the parallel he shows us to Thomas Edison, giving an example of a case in which the famous inventor followed the start-up mantra "fake it 'til you make it," as well as to other Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, which puts this story in context as well as helps explain it.

    Elizabeth Holmes was brilliant at selling investors and motivating her employees with the promise of a breakthrough in blood testing, but she was woefully incompetent at building an engineering team or listening to R&D inputs. What she failed to understand is that while you can be boldly aspirational and even attempt to emulate the approach of your idol (in her case, Steve Jobs) down to his look, at the end of the day it has to be grounded in some semblance of reality. For Jobs, setting aside his massive personal flaws, he always had the ability to balance both of these things, and he always had a strong counterpart, starting with Steve Wozniak early on. Where was Elizabeth Holmes's Woz? It's telling that other than a brilliant scientist/PhD from Cambridge who was marginalized when he started injecting unpleasant truth into the discussion (ultimately leading him to commit suicide), there is no mention or interview with a VP of R&D, or VP of Engineering here. Instead we see the President, and ex-Apple guy who was also her boyfriend, operating in the same smoke and mirrors sales act as her, as well as one of the company's creative marketing / brand types. There was never any "there" there, as they say, with the result being a constant game of "pay no attention to the man behind the curtain" that snowballed.

    How Holmes was able to deceive a number of powerful, older men, and then leverage that to achieve great visibility, further investment, and the Walgreens deal is pretty shocking, even by Silicon Valley standards. I've lived in the Valley for some time, and have experience with start-ups, investors, and entrepreneurs. There is often a grand vision and the joke is like that old cartoon with the calculation at the blackboard, with the step drawn at an impossible leap labeled "then a miracle occurs." There is also always going to be investor money lost in a number of startups and that's just a part of the risk - but what makes this story reprehensible is that people's health was on the line. Perhaps one thing lacking in the documentary is an interview with people who were negatively impacted, such as one woman whose bogus test results indicated she had cancer.

    The young employees at Theranos understood the human factor, with Tyler Schultz pointing out (perhaps a little too glibly) that with their 65% success rate at detecting syphilis, someone could think they were STD-free and spread the disease. Holmes never seems to get this, and to the bitter end she continues lying. I thought the documentary showed remarkable restraint in not drawing a conclusion, and even showed someone say that he thought she simply dreamed it so deeply that she didn't realize she was being deceptive. I don't buy that for a second. Aside from being an awful executive, she's an awful person, and to me comes across as a master manipulator and borderline sociopath, one cloaked in the altruistic goal of revolutionizing health care. In the end she's not stretching the truth with the aim of making this thing happen, she's lying to save her own skin. It's a chilling, chilling portrait.
    9ejonconrad

    Very interesting, but still leaves some (possibly unanswerable) questions unanswered

    I was struck by some of the similarities between this and an ostensibly very different documentary I recently watched, about the disastrous Fyre (music) Festival. In both cases, a young person managed to get older and supposedly wiser people to give them ridiculous amounts of money based purely on their chutzpah, while providing nothing in the way of oversight or verification in return. In both cases, everyone involved should have known better from the beginning.

    I don't know the history of the production of this documentary, but there's a lot of very flattering footage of Holmes, so my guess is that at the heart of this, someone was working on a hagiography about her and then re-tasked the footage when things went South. This means you'll get your fill of her strange unblinking stare and weirdly affected voice.

    I found very amusing that hordes of older men were quick to fawn over her (sometimes to an embarrassing degree) and support her financially, while the only person who didn't buy it was her female professor at Stanford. Is it possible these men maybe weren't thinking with their brains? I wonder (actually I don't).

    Everyone compared her to Steve Jobs, and she consciously cultivated the image, but the thing everyone forgets is the Apple didn't involve any new or even challenging technology. No one doubted you could build a home computer. Jobs' genius was realizing people would *buy* one. In contrast, Holmes was claiming to have developed a revolutionary new technology that had eluded some of the biggest medical tech companies in the world, and everyone simply took her word for it with no evidence whatsoever. Imagine if instead of a computer, Jobs had claimed to have built a spaceship in his garage, and then rounded up investors without showing it to anyone. That's more like what Theranos was like.

    The movie does a very good job of laying out the facts and the time line, but a central question remains unanswered; namely, when exactly did things go from "optimism" to "fraud"? Was it a scam from the beginning, or did she really think she could pull it off? Maybe that can't be answered by anyone but Holmes, and she's not saying. Even if you're very generous with your impression of her, the "adults" should have more realistic and looked out for things.

    In the end, it's a cautionary tale from which I doubt anyone will learn anything.
    5blakekhodges

    Important story, but unnecessarily long, repetitive, and overstylized

    Grateful to see this story told, but the documentary is unnecessarily long, repetitive, and overstylized to make up for it.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film's producer met with Elizabeth Holmes early in development, before criminal charges were filed, to determine whether she could be interviewed for the film. Ultimately the director decided he wanted to portray how Holmes carefully crafted Theranos and her own image to be seen by the public, up until the story unraveled. Accordingly, aside from brief footage from her deposition, all footage of Holmes seen in the film is from archival material from before she was charged, most of it her own commissioned promotional video for Theranos. Alex Gibney remarked "She made the documentary she wanted me to invest in and I used it to a different purpose."
    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 702: Dragged Across Concrete (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      U Can't Touch This
      Written by M.C. Hammer (as Stanley Kirk Burrell), Rick James & Alonzo Miller

      Performed by M.C. Hammer

      Courtesy of Capitol Records

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 18, 2019 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Untitled Alex Gibney/HBO Project
    • Production companies
      • HBO Documentary Films
      • Jigsaw Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16:9 HD

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