The rise and fall of the Enron company, as seen from the perspective of employee Brian Cruver, based on his book.The rise and fall of the Enron company, as seen from the perspective of employee Brian Cruver, based on his book.The rise and fall of the Enron company, as seen from the perspective of employee Brian Cruver, based on his book.
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Nancy Anne Sakovich
- Liz Perry
- (as Nancy Sakovich)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe real Brian Cruver, whose book inspired the movie, said the movie was very accurate to his experiences working at Enron, with two exceptions: he felt the movie overemphasized the hiring of former strippers as secretaries and assistants, and that the Enron company party showed in the film was very tame compared to the actual company's rallies.
Featured review
This movie is a decently entertaining depiction of the fall of Enron, which was one of our nation's leading companies. It's based on the point of view of a recent University of Texas MBA grad, who gets hired in the bankruptcy division of Enron. For people who didn't follow the scandal, the movie does a solid job of illustrating why greed led to Enron's demise. With shareholders and upper management demanding better numbers (and thus better stock value), everyone was under pressure to cook the books.
There is some comedy in the movie (the Arthur Anderson audit team is always playing nerf basketball or computer golf; one of the characters gets a job at Worldcom after being laid off at Enron). However, being a TV movie, there is not much time for character depth. Did anyone really feel for the woman who lost her college savings in Enron stock? Also, I understand the producers were looking for star power, but Shannon Elizabeth did not belong in this movie. She is far too pretty to be playing a down-to-earth farm girl who hates the glamorous life her fiance brings her. Overall, this is a watch able movie for those that are interested in business.
There is some comedy in the movie (the Arthur Anderson audit team is always playing nerf basketball or computer golf; one of the characters gets a job at Worldcom after being laid off at Enron). However, being a TV movie, there is not much time for character depth. Did anyone really feel for the woman who lost her college savings in Enron stock? Also, I understand the producers were looking for star power, but Shannon Elizabeth did not belong in this movie. She is far too pretty to be playing a down-to-earth farm girl who hates the glamorous life her fiance brings her. Overall, this is a watch able movie for those that are interested in business.
- Go_Blue_99
- Jan 5, 2003
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Crooked E: The Unshredded Truth About Enron (2003) officially released in Canada in English?
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