| 100 |
Entertainment Weekly
A deeply straightforward yet beautifully crafted documentary.
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| 100 |
Premiere
Delivers a polished and well-researched look at America 's largest corporate bankruptcy with a laser-sharp focus on the personalities, practices, and fates of the top executives behind the Enron meltdown.
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| 100 |
Christian Science Monitor
Spellbinding.
|
| 100 |
San Francisco Chronicle
More than worthwhile.
|
| 100 |
Philadelphia Inquirer
With no-nonsense narration by Peter Coyote and a soundtrack that's at once apt, ironic and really, really good, The Smartest Guys in the Room is anything but a dry dissection of a major Wall Street debacle.
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| 100 |
Baltimore Sun
The movie grows richer as it goes along and contrasting pieces click together.
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| 100 |
Empire
Helen O'Hara
Despite the talking heads and grainy blow-ups of TV footage, the film boasts some rather gorgeous cinematography and moves briskly, with the interviews masterfully edited.
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| 91 |
Portland Oregonian
With this amoral business environment, it's not a question of if there will be another Enron, but when.
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| 90 |
LA Weekly
Fiercely intelligent, terrifying and absurdly funny documentary.
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| 90 |
Los Angeles Times
It's a chilling, completely fascinating documentary.
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| 90 |
The Hollywood Reporter
James Greenberg
Not only a great cautionary tale, it's a civics lesson that should be seen by every concerned citizen.
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| 90 |
Dallas Observer
A thoroughly professional, frequently spectacular piece of muckraking.
|
| 88 |
New York Daily News
Is a movie worthwhile if it makes you sick?
Absolutely, in the case of Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room.
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| 88 |
Chicago Tribune
Should hold you spellbound.
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| 88 |
ReelViews
Truly a tale for our time.
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| 88 |
Boston Globe
Entertaining and enraging.
|
| 88 |
Chicago Sun-Times
This is not a political documentary. It is a crime story. No matter what your politics, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room will make you mad.
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| 88 |
Miami Herald
Gordon Gekko didn't disappear with the 1980s; he just became a lot more difficult to pick out from a crowd.
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| 83 |
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Based on a best-selling book by Fortune magazine writers Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, the film approaches Enron through the Horatio Alger saga of its founder, Kenneth Lay, the son of a dirt-poor Missouri Baptist minister.
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| 80 |
Chicago Reader
To my taste the only serious distraction and ethical lapse is Gibney's sarcastic, cheap-shot use of popular songs like "That Old Black Magic," "Love for Sale," and "God Bless the Child" to underscore certain points; it seems almost to celebrate the shamelessness of the creeps being exposed.
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| 80 |
Wall Street Journal
Gives us the same sort of perverse pleasure that's been a staple of "60 Minutes" over the years -- watching world-class crooks tell world-class lies.
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| 80 |
Washington Post
It's a story of jaw-dropping chutzpah, grim, mostly hindsight-based humor and more stomach-churning drama than you could find in 10 screenplays.
|
| 80 |
The Onion (A.V. Club)
Handsomely produced and photographed, which alone distinguishes it from the guerrilla standards of its cut-rate peers, Enron succeeds most by simply making a complex situation graspable, a tall order when the perpetrators are masters of grand-scale deception.
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| 80 |
Village Voice
Soberly entertaining documentary.
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| 80 |
Film Threat
Peter Hanson
It’s only by understanding what went wrong that we can hope to recognize the warning signs next time.
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| 80 |
New York Magazine
The most blessedly traditional sort of documentary. It follows the twisty, complicated rise and fall of Enron in steady, chronological order, from the mid-eighties to the present.
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| 80 |
Variety
By turns amazing, amusing and appalling.
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| 80 |
Slate
The documentary cannot be called muckraking, as the muck has already been well-raked, but Gibney's recounting has a touch of playful sadism that I quite enjoyed.
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| 80 |
The New York Times
A tight, fascinating chronicle of arrogance and greed.
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| 78 |
Austin Chronicle
Despite these biases, the movie helps the average American understand the nature of the shell games perpetuated by Enron and how "synergistic corruptions" can corrupt absolutely.
|
| 75 |
USA Today
The film's most climactic moments involve the chilling audiotapes of avaricious Enron traders as they toy with California's energy crisis, wringing millions in profits from the misfortune of an entire state.
|
| 75 |
New York Post
The story is fascinating, infuriating and even laugh-out-loud funny at times.
|
| 75 |
Rolling Stone
It's scarier than "The Amityville Horror," as scandalous as "Fahrenheit 9/11" and loaded with more conspiracies than "The Interpreter."
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| 70 |
TV Guide
It's a fascinating story teeming with pride, arrogance, greed and overweening hubris, and Gibney attempts to give it all an added dimension by finding the archetypes of Greek tragedy among the sleazy deals and Ponzi-scheme financing.
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| 70 |
The New Republic
Well-knit, generally lucid documentary.
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| 63 |
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Surely the real story of Enron is that so many accountants, lawyers, bankers and politicians were willing to call a dog a duck in order to remain happy insiders in the world's biggest pyramid scheme.
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| 50 |
Salon.com
Amid the infoglut that surrounds us, Gibney's film feels too much like more noise. Is it telling the most important business story of our lifetimes, or is it just another fantastical yarn, crammed into the schedule after Scott and Laci Peterson, but before Charlemagne and the ancient Peruvian astronauts?
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