Enron:
The Smartest Guys in the Room
Directed by: Alex Gibney
Premise: Documentary narrating
the rise and fall of Enron and the culture of greed within the company that lead
to its collapse.
What Works: Enron: The
Smartest Guys in the Room has great narrative that is woven together through
interviews and narration. It is dramatic but does not pull punches with major
doses of pathos. Instead, the film allows Enron’s key figures to hang
themselves with their own audacity by juxtaposing facts with conflicting
statements. The picture gets into an appropriate level of detail and manages to
cover the pertinent information and delve into a deep level of analysis while
not getting bogged down in accounting details. One of the most interesting
things that the film does is to play out Enron’s fall against a broader
cultural background of deregulation and out of control capitalism.
What Doesn’t: The film’s lack
of pathos appeal is refreshing but it would have helped the film to have more
reactions from the rank and file employees of Enron who lost everything. Also,
the film does not acknowledge that Enron had made contributions to both the
Republican and Democratic parties.
DVD extras: Commentary track,
deleted scenes, making-of featurettes, “Where are they now?” feature,
gallery of Enron cartoons, Fortune magazine articles, index of website
with current information.
Bottom Line: Among the surge of political and partisan documentaries that have been released in the last few years, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room is among the best, in some ways eclipsing Fahrenheit 9/11 because it reaches beyond the current events to underlying issues of human greed.