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Madoff - Der 50-Milliarden Dollar Betrug

Originaltitel: Madoff
  • Miniserie
  • 2016
  • TV-PG
  • 41 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,4/10
2929
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
4.313
1.032
Richard Dreyfuss in Madoff - Der 50-Milliarden Dollar Betrug (2016)
The rise and fall of Bernie Madoff, who's Ponzi scheme bilked $65 billion from unsuspecting victims.
trailer wiedergeben1:01
2 Videos
89 Fotos
Wahres VerbrechenBiographieDramaGeschichteKriminalitätFinanzielles Drama

Der Aufstieg und Fall von Bernie Madoff, dessen Schneeballsystem ahnungslosen Opfern 65 Milliarden Dollar abgeknöpft hat - der größte Betrug in der Geschichte der USA.Der Aufstieg und Fall von Bernie Madoff, dessen Schneeballsystem ahnungslosen Opfern 65 Milliarden Dollar abgeknöpft hat - der größte Betrug in der Geschichte der USA.Der Aufstieg und Fall von Bernie Madoff, dessen Schneeballsystem ahnungslosen Opfern 65 Milliarden Dollar abgeknöpft hat - der größte Betrug in der Geschichte der USA.

  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Drew Gregory
    • Richard Dreyfuss
    • Blythe Danner
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,4/10
    2929
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    4.313
    1.032
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Drew Gregory
      • Richard Dreyfuss
      • Blythe Danner
    • 19Benutzerrezensionen
    • 6Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Episoden4

    Folgen durchsuchen
    HöchsteAm besten bewertet1 Jahreszeit2016

    Videos2

    Madoff Confesses His Crimes
    Clip 1:20
    Madoff Confesses His Crimes
    First Look Trailer
    Trailer 1:01
    First Look Trailer
    First Look Trailer
    Trailer 1:01
    First Look Trailer

    Fotos88

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    + 83
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    Topbesetzung80

    Ändern
    Drew Gregory
    • Agent Neil Smith
    • 2016
    Richard Dreyfuss
    Richard Dreyfuss
    • Bernie Madoff
    • 2016
    Blythe Danner
    Blythe Danner
    • Ruth Madoff
    • 2016
    Tom Lipinski
    Tom Lipinski
    • Mark Madoff
    • 2016
    Bruce Altman
    Bruce Altman
    • Gary Flumenbaum
    • 2016
    Frank Whaley
    Frank Whaley
    • Harry Markopolos
    • 2016
    Michael Rispoli
    Michael Rispoli
    • Frank DiPascali
    • 2016
    Charles Grodin
    Charles Grodin
    • Carl Shapiro
    • 2016
    Peter Scolari
    Peter Scolari
    • Peter Madoff
    • 2016
    Susan Blommaert
    Susan Blommaert
    • Vera Zweig
    • 2016
    Jason Kravits
    Jason Kravits
    • Frank Avellino
    • 2016
    Erin Cummings
    Erin Cummings
    • Eleanor Squillari
    • 2016
    Lewis Black
    Lewis Black
    • Gregory Perkins
    • 2016
    David Margulies
    David Margulies
    • Elie Wiesel
    • 2016
    Michael Bryan French
    Michael Bryan French
    • Blake North
    • 2016
    Lyne Renée
    Lyne Renée
    • Catherine Hooper
    • 2016
    David Aaron Baker
    David Aaron Baker
    • Nathan Rubenstein
    • 2016
    Annie Heise
    Annie Heise
    • Stephanie Mikesell
    • 2016
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen19

    7,42.9K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8deedee0

    Best of them all

    This is by far the best production, documentaries included, of the Madoff story. The script was excellent. The information and plot are easy to follow without being weighed down by boring financial specifics. The major players are represented well and the acting is superb. Dreyfuss, Danner, and Rispoli make De Niro, Pfeiffer, and Azaria look like amateurs! I enjoyed the miniseries so much that I wish there were more episodes!
    8blanche-2

    a $50 billion fraud that took years to discover

    "Madoff" is the story of sociopath Bernie Madoff, a story we all know too well. It's worth watching for the performances.

    It stars Richard Dreyfuss as Madoff. He's terrific, and I imagine very much like the real man. The two-parter follows the story of the Ponzi scheme, the effect on Bernie's family, and Madoff's inner dialogue, done as a narration.

    Other actors in this excellent cast include Blythe Danner, Tom Lipinski, Peter Scolari, Danny Deferrari, Frank Whaley, and Erin Cummings.

    Though the first part is all over the place, with dizzying camera work and disjunctive scenes; the second part is much better.

    The film does a great job of showing what happens when people -- like, for instance, the SEC -- turn a blind eye to something because they believe someone to be respectable. It took securities investigator Harry Markopolos 10 minutes to figure out that Madoff was running a Ponzi scheme, and six hours to figure out how he was doing it. But no one listened - and that's the title of his book.

    It also demonstrates how Madoff saw himself as a victim, the "fall guy," finding it outrageous that he was being blamed.

    Standout in the cast, besides Dreyfuss, is Peter Scolari as Peter Madoff - a brilliant, emotional performance; Tom Lipinski and Danny Deferrari as his sons, who found out the trading division they ran was just a front and turned him in; Blythe Danner as Ruth Madoff, who stood by him and tried to get her sons to sign a bond for his bail (they refused); and Michael Rispoli, who worked side by side with Bernie.

    I saw "Enron: The Smartest Guy in the Room" and also a documentary about Madoff, and saw the SEC meeting where a Judge slammed the SEC, asking them "what the hell" they thought they were doing, ignoring countless letters of complaint about Madoff, and the fact that somehow they didn't know he wasn't a registered agent. Not that he needed to be one - the only investments he ever made were in his own bank account, to the tune of $50 billion.

    For Bernie's investors, half of them as of this date have been completely repaid, with more money being returned all the time. Irving Picard has been diligent in going after Bernie's money - but mind you, he formed foundations and gave millions to charities, and those charities wound up having to return the money.

    It's an awful story, but it's hard to have pity for Madoff. It's hard to feel sorry for his investors, because it was greed that brought them to him in the first place, the carrot of big money.

    The ones to pity are the members of Madoff's family: his two sons, now both deceased, his son Andrew telling a newspaper that his father's disgrace "killed my brother (suicide) and it's killing me slowly (lmantle cell lymphoma)." The family has a genetic predisposition to cancer; leukemia killed his nephew Roger.

    In one of the saddest moments of the film, Madoff presents his brother Peter (Scolari), Roger's father, with a new car shortly after Roger's death. Peter of course works in Madoff's firm and knows Bernie's methods aren't above board, but he doesn't know details. Peter gets into the car and sobs, "Roger, he's been paying me off for years, hasn't he?"

    "Nobody wants the magic trick explained," Madoff tells his wife. And he was right. Nobody wants the magic trick explained as long as the checks are good and the money keeps rolling in.
    vchimpanzee

    Fine job, especially by Dreyfuss

    I didn't know that much about Bernie Madoff, except that he had supposedly cheated people out of millions of dollars. Actually, it was billions.

    But right away Richard Dreyfuss made this supposedly evil man look like a great guy. You have to like him. He had his clients' best interests at heart, but he knew what he was doing would be frowned on by the SEC and the federal government. And yet he had been doing this since the 1960s--making big money for people regardless of what the market was doing.

    And it became quickly apparent that Bernie cared about his family. A loving wife who had only a vague idea that her husband's dealings weren't quite legal. Two sons, one more uptight than the other, who like Sgt. Schultz knew NOTHING (at least that's how the movie portrays it). A brother who has some knowledge that Bernie's activities aren't what they should be, but is kept pretty much out of the picture.

    Dreyfuss does a fantastic job. I might even say Emmy-worthy. Most of the time Bernie is quite charming and a good guy. He can get quite angry when pushed. Knowing investigators are this close to putting him away, he seems quite vulnerable. And this last part is shown quite effectively with rapid-fire editing. The sound stays consistent but we keep seeing the nightmare Bernie thinks is coming, or flashbacks, or whatever, in addition to what is happening now. And this editing technique is used several times.

    Michael Rispoli is very good as the man in charge of the 17th floor. I should mention that the legitimate business operated from fabulous modern offices where everyone dressed for success on the 19th floor, where the employees included the brother and two sons. Mark resented that Frank got the promotion he deserved, but Bernie would not let his sons get mixed up in the illegal activities on the dark, depressing 17th floor where it was always Casual Friday.

    Ben Dreyfuss effectively showed us a charming and ambitious but not particularly endearing young Bernie in flashbacks. He showed how Benrie learned to do what he did.

    Blythe Danner is a loving, caring wife, until ... and then wait until you see what she's like. A very good job with a wide range of emotions.

    Erin Cummings is impressive as the loyal secretary. She seems out of place with the New Yawk accent in these plush offices, but she is quite appealing.

    Peter Scolari used to be so funny, but he's mostly serious here, which he has become good at in recent years. He really shows his ability when brother Peter's son gets very sick, and Peter starts feeling guilty about what he knows he has done wrong. And we have to go through the hard times with the family.

    There are happy times with the family as well, which makes up for the difficulties.

    But of course watching Bernie wine and dine and otherwise impress his billionaire clients (soon to be broke in some cases) is lots of fun. One of them is in West Palm Beach and the big band music in the scenes there is great.

    Frank Whaley is the man who started the process of bringing down Bernie Madoff. Since some situations and people are fictional, we don't know if he's real or not, but it doesn't matter. He is a brilliant investigator who lacks people skills and is often quite nervous. People don't take him seriously, and even when they do, Bernie has the ability to talk himself out of the situation.

    Or government officials are just morons. It doesn't matter. It's all quite entertaining. You want Bernie to win, but you know something is bound to happen.

    And when it does, it really does. There goes that rapid-fire editing again, this time with the sound matching the visuals.

    In one sequence the people are either real victims of Bernie Madoff or they are very good actors.

    Also effective is the apparent use of real ABC News anchors reporting on the scandal.

    Dreyfuss appeared on the TV screen during the closing credits, at least when I watched, to invite us to watch the real story coming up next, and to praise the talented actors and writers whose work we just saw, and I agree with him.

    Like him or not, I think this movie is a winner.
    5kjf2007-1

    Not enough of the greed or the aftermath is shown

    Considering that they drag this out over nearly 3 full hours you would think you'd see it all. Not nearly enough is shown of how the Madoffs lived high on the hog for decades. And far too much time is spent leading up to the eventual crash and not enough is shown of the aftermath. If Madoff had only preyed upon the filthy rich he would have been far more forgivable, but he took down quite a few smaller folks in his fall from grace. To my way of thinking, Mark Madoff comes off as less redeemable than his father even though Mark supposedly had no knowledge of the ponzi scheme. What sort of son disowns his own father over a white collar crime?

    The great irony in this tale is that ALL of Wall Street is one huge ponzi scheme. The eventual collapse will one day make Madoff a forgotten footnote. It's the age old truth folks - if an investment seems too good to be true, it is.

    Overall an entertaining movie best viewed at double speed. It was nice to see Richard Dreyfus and Charles Grodin again.
    10Ed-Shullivan

    A clear narrative account of Bernie Madoff's 64 billion dollar Ponzi scam

    I was so pleased to hear that the A List actor Richard Dreyfuss (American Graffiti, Jaws, and The Goodbye Girl) signed on to play the U.S.A.'s biggest investment fraudster, the Ponzi scheme master, Bernie Madoff. From the beginning of the biographical film, Richard Dreyfuss narrates the Bernie Madoff biography and he walks us through his "modus operandi" how he conned so many smart and wealthy investors starting in 1960 when his accountant father-in-law introduces a young Bernie Madoff to his own circle of clients, as well as many elderly people who entrusted Bernie Madoff with their life savings.

    Bernie's method of convincing investors to continue investing with him was to tell his clients that he was prepared to immediately cut them a cheque for their entire investment plus interest but then they would not be allowed to invest with him again. Madoff had his brother, wife and sons working in his firm and as the story progresses we really are left to wonder whether or not they knew anything about the Ponzi scheme, or did they just believe in Bernie Madoff the investment guru, who was their husband, father or brother.

    Also agreeing to play in this non-sanctioned autobiography film "Madoff" are Blythe Danner as Bernie's wife, Peter Scolari as Bernie's brother Peter, Michael Rispoli as the behind the scenes book fixer, Charles Grodin as Carl Shapiro, Frank Whaley as a competitive broker named Harry Markopolos who figures out Bernie's secret method which is simply a fraud. Richard Dreyfuss's real life son Ben Dreyfuss plays the younger Bernie Madoff which makes it easier to believe the evolution of Bernie Madoff over the decades.

    Slowly the film peels away each layer of skin one by one, on this onion and we get to see the real Bernie Madoff as the scammer that he really is and then how the S.E.C. (Securities and Exchange Commissions) closes in on him to eventually stop the bleeding and the U.S.A.'s biggest Ponzi scheme. Since the film was originally released as a two part story and it was deluged with commercial breaks I look forward to purchasing the DVD version and watching the film the way it should be seen, without any commercial breaks.

    It is an excellent film with great insight into how easily thousands of investors were scammed for decades as long as the return on investments continued to be high and as Bernie would say "we need to continue to grow and find new investors". I give the film two thumbs up. Definitely worth investing your movie viewing time in, but not your money with Bernie Madoff who will remain in prison for his 150 year sentence.

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      One of two films involving Bernie Madoff to be released back-to-back. The other is The Wizard of Lies - Das Lügengenie (2017), also made for television.

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 10. November 2016 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Madoff
    • Drehorte
      • Vancouver, British Columbia, Kanada
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Lincoln Square Productions
      • Parabolic NY
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      • 41 Min.
    • Farbe
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      • Stereo
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 16:9 HD

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