(Advertising), Directed by Jack Conway (1947).
The Hucksters (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM); VHS - 115 min.).
Clark Gable, Deborah Kerr, Sydney Greenstreet, Ava Gardner star in
film adaptation of Frederic Wakeman's 1946 novel of same name.
Greenstreet is soap tycoon villain who illustrates cynical view of
advertising industry.
(Advertising), Directed by Frank Tashlin (1957).
Will Success
Spoil Rock Hunter (VHS - 93 min.). Spoof of the TV advertising
industry - low man on the advertising agency's totem pole finds
the perfect spokesmodel for Stay-Put lipstick - causes problems.
(Advertising), Directed by Yasuzo Masumura (1958). Kyojin to
Gangu (95 min.). Advertising executive for a caramel company
that is planning to launch a new product, in fierce competition
with two other companies; tries to extract information about his
competitors advertising campaigns, from his girlfriend, who works
for one rival, and his old college friend, who works for the other
rival company.
(Advertising), Directed by Delbert Mann (1961).
Lover Come Back (DVD - 107 min.).
Lover Come Back (VHS - 107 min.) Advertising industry comedy - pre-feminist
studies of women in the workplace. Rock Hudson, Doris Day star as
advertising executives in different agencies. She tries to get him
thrown of the industry, he bribes a woman who is to testify
against him by starring her in a commercial for a nonexistent
product which he then must invent; he impersonates its inventor,
she tries to get the new product account.
(Advertising), Directed by H. Bruce Humberstone (1962).
Madison Avenue 20th Century Fox, 90 min.). Dana Andrews,
Eleanor Parker, Dana Andrews.
(Advertising), Directed by Norman Jewison (1963).
The Thrill
of It All
(DVD -108 min.).
The Thrill
of It All
(VHS -108 min.). Advertising industry comedy - woman
turns from a housewife into a famous television personality doing
TV commercials for a soap manufacturer.
(Advertising), Directed by Robert Downey Sr. (1969).
Putney Swope. (DVD- 84 min.);
Putney Swope. (VHS - 84 min.). The board of directors at a
Madison Avenue ad agency must elect a new chairman, and, in the
maneuvering to make sure that enemies don't get votes, all the
board members accidentally cast their ballot for the board's token
black man, Putney Swope (Arnold Johnson). Swope immediately cleans
house and transforms the agency into New York's hippest shop with
a Black Power mentality and a willingness to tell previously
unspoken truths in advertising.
(Advertising), Directed by Jan Egleson (1990).
A Shock to
the System (DVD - 91 min.).
A Shock to
the System (VHS - 91 min.). Michael Caine stars as an advertising
executive already celebrating his anxiously awaited promotion when
he learns that one of his subordinates will be promoted instead.
Frustrated that his hated life will never change, he starts a
cunning ploy to take bloody revenge on everyone who humiliated him
- starting with his unnerving wife.
(Advertising), Directed by Barak Goodman (2001).
The
Merchants of Cool (VHS - 55 min.). TV Documentary - examines how
businesses seek the ever-elusive "cool" and use it to sell
products to teens (more than 30 million, command over 150 billion
dollars in disposable income, exposed to over 3000 advertising
messages in an average day). Once corporations find cool, it soon
ceases to be so; means marketers constantly search for new
products and strategies to capture the attention of their target
audience. This documentary also looks at how real life and TV life
blur, acting like a feedback loop to push popular teen culture
towards more violent and sexual behaviors.
(Advertising), Directed by Lars Kraume (2001). Viktor Vogel
- Commercial Man (aka
"Advertising Rules" (DVD
- 108 min.).
"Advertising Rules" (VHS
- 108
min.). Shenanigans in trying to land the Opel auto contract.
Directed by Jam Handy (Advertising) (2004).
History of Advertising: Automobiles (1930-1940). (DVD -
117 min.). Some of these advertisements were shown as
newsreels before motion pictures. Others were actually some of the
first ads ever to appear on television! Depicts classic
advertisement films and examples of automobile centric stories. It
includes classic "Capitalistic Realist" dramas showing the
manufacture of cars from foundry to finished vehicle. Also
features examples of a day in the life of automobile workers in
the U.S. while attempting to convince them that their own fortunes
were inexorably linked to the fortunes of the company.
(Advertising), Directed by Scott Reid (2004).
History of Advertising: General (1930-1950). (DVD - 117
min.). Shows you the myriad of creative ways advertising agencies
used to sell their products including: Sky writing - Billboard
advertisements - Short films - Electric signs. Imagine being an
advertising executive at the heart of the Great Depression - the
worst economic cycle in American history. Most people did not have
any spare cash. It was virtually impossible to get people to spend
money! Yet, unless admen wanted to find themselves on the
unemployment line they had to find a way. A complete track by
track list of the interesting topics on the disk includes:
Nonesuch Coffee - Behind the Bright Lights - Sky Billboards - Time
Savers for House Makers - Film Mystery, A (Dreft Screen Ad) - For
Good Living (Brown Derby Beer Promo) - True Experience of Officer
Harold Sewell, The - To Market, To Market (Part I) - To Market, To
Market (Part II) - Curtis-Wright Shorts (7 Subjects) - An Old
Chinese Proverb: One Picture Is Worth Ten Thousand Words.
(Advertising), Directed by: Paul Weitz (2004). In Good
Company (DVD -110 min.;
In Good
Company (VHS -110 min.; Universal City, CA: Universal Pictures).
Dennis Quaid stars as an employee demoted from head of ad sales
for a major magazine when the company he works for is acquired in
a corporate takeover. His new boss, Topher Grace, a business
school grad up on latest b-school buzz, is half his age. Quaid is
old school - develops clients through handshake deals and
relationships. Grace believes in synergy, cross-promotion (the
magazine with the cell phone division and "Krispity Krunch," a
snack food under the same corporate umbrella [a la AOL/Time Warner
concept]). Quaid - married, two teenage daughters, gets shocked
when his wife tells him she's pregnant with a new child = can't
afford to lose his job in the wave of corporate layoffs because of
mortgage, college tuition, new child. Grace - newly married,
dumped by his wife of seven months just as he gets his promotion.
New complication develops - Grace begins an affair with Quaid's
daughter (Scarlett Johansson) = makes a difficult relationship
harder.
(Advertising) (2005).
History Of Advertising - General (1950-1970), 119 min.).
Vintage collection of high quality movie clips is the finest
collection of advertising snapshots available, providing a
valuable insight into the marketing strategies implemented during
this period; fairly complete panorama of the first decades of
television advertising. Lots of the ads are classics. Others are a
good reminder that television standards have changed a good deal
over time; how television advertising started in the 1950s, and
how it changed into a much more professional, sophisticated
marketing tool by the end of the 1960s.
(Advertising) (2005).
History of Advertising: General, 1930-1970 (Bundle Pack),
237 min.). History of Advertising General: 1930-1950 (2-DVD Set);
History of Advertising General: 1950-1970 (2-DVD Set).
(Agribusiness), Directed by D. Ross Lederman (1938).
Racketeers of the Range (62 min.). Large packing company is
trying to obtain a monopoly by taking over the last small
independent meat packer while owner of the largest ranch is trying
to stop it. When independent meat packer agrees to sell, ranch
owner gets a delay by forcing the small company to declare
bankruptcy and having himself made receiver. Now the large company
has to deal with him, resorts to rustling when he refuses.
(Aircraft), Directed by Martin Scorsese (2004).
The Aviator
(DVD - 169 min.;
The Aviator
(VHS - 169 min.; Burbank, CA: Warner Brothers Entertainment). The early
years of legendary director and aviator Howard Hughes' career,
from the late 1920's to the mid-1940's.
(Automotive), Directed by Daniel Petrie (1978).
The Betsy
(DVD - 125 min.).
The Betsy
(VHS - 125 min.) Laurence Olivier, Robert Duvall, Katherine Ross, Tommy Lee
Jones star - patriarch of a family-owned corporation hires a young
race car driver to help him design a fuel efficient car in
secrecy. They face resistance from the president of the company
(the patriarch's grandson), who wishes to eliminate the motor car
division because of bad blood between himself and his grandfather.
Race car driver gets deeper into the web of deception and
corporate intrigue.
(Automotive), Directed by Ron Howard (1986).
Gung Ho (DVD - 112 min.).
Gung Ho (VHS - 112 min.). (Paramount). Hunt Stevenson
(Michael Keaton) persuades a Japanese auto firm to reopen his
hometown's auto factory, he's a hero. Japanese hire him to enforce
their policies among his American co-workers = head-on cultural
collision, suddenly finds himself having to justify his own job,
he's forced to choose between redundancy or the seemingly inhuman
Japanese work ethic that the new owners have brought with them.
(Automotive), Directed by Michael Verhoeven (1986).
Killing Cars (DVD - 104 min.).
Killing Cars (VHS
-104 min.). Story of automotive intrigue,
oil barons, corporate finance, and international villainy.
Inventor of an environmentally friendly car powered by energy
cells, after having given his patented worldcar to a German
automaker for testing, becomes the target of killers who want his
patent. Evil Arab petroleum lords also want to stop this threat to
the gasoline market.
(Automotive), Directed by Francis Ford Coppola (1988).
Tucker: The Man and His Dream
(DVD - 110 min.);
Tucker: The Man and His Dream
(VHS - 110 min.); Based on a true
story. Shortly after World War II, Preston Tucker, played by Jeff
Bridges, is a grandiose
schemer with a new dream, to produce the best cars ever made. With
the assistance of Abe Karatz and some impressive salesmanship on
his own part, he obtains funding and begins to build his factory.
The whole movie also has many parallels with director Coppola's
own efforts to build a new movie studio of his own.
(Automotive), Directed by Michael Moore (1989).
Roger and Me. (DVD - 91 min.);
Roger and Me (VHS - 91 min.). A documentary about the
closure of General Motors' plant at Flint, Michigan, which
resulted in the loss of 30,000 jobs. Details the attempts of
filmmaker Michael Moore to get an interview with GM CEO Roger
Smith.
(Automotive), Directed by Jim Klein (1996). Taken for a Ride
(52 min.). How the American auto industry engineered the demise of
city public-transit systems.
(Automotive) (2004).
Biography - Henry Ford: Tin Lizzy Tycoon - (DVD - 50 min;
A & E Home Studio)
(Banking), Directed by Frank Capra (1932).
American Madness
(VHS - 75 min.). Banker as hero - loosely based on A. P. Giannini,
founder of Bank of America.
(Banking), Directed by Alfred L. Werker (1934). The House of
Rothschild, 94 min.). The story of the rise of the Rothschild
financial empire founded by Mayer Rothschild and continued by his
five sons. From humble beginnings the business grows and helps to
finance the war against Napoleon, but it's not always easy,
especially because of the predjudices against the family.
(Banking), Directed Frank Capra (1946).
It's A Wonderful
Life (DVD - 130 min.);
It's A Wonderful
Life (VHS -130 min.); Miserly banker, ultimate postwar villain,
seeks to buy out small businessmen and independent operators and
consolidate power. Soldiers had returned from WW II gto find
country rules by huge companies which had grown fat on wartime
contracts.
(Banking), Directed by Hasada Masato (1999). Spellbound
(
114 min.). Arrest of a sokaiya gangster exposes links between the
Asahi Central Bank and the Yakuza (the Japanese equivalent of the
Mafia).
(Banking), Directed by John Mackenzie (2001).
Quicksand
(DVD - 94 min.);
Quicksand
(VHS - 94 min.); Michael Keaton and Michael Caine star - workaholic head
of the compliance section of a New York bank flies to Monaco to
investigate unusual unusual deposits from an offshore bank and
meets a down-on-his-luck international film star who has become
embroiled in criminal activities.
(Beverages), Directed by Billy Wilder (1961).
One, Two, Three. (DVD - 110 min.).;
One, Two, Three.
(VHS - 110 min.). C.R. MacNamara presides over the Coca-Cola
branch of Germany. He is working hard and trying his very best to
impress the Atlanta headquarters, since he has heard that the
European headquarters in London will soon be looking for a new
head. Now, Coca-Cola boss Mr. Hazeltine asks MacNamara to take
care of his daughter Scarlett, who is going to take a trip to
Europe. Scarlett, however, does not behave the way a young
respectable girl of her age should: Instead of sightseeing, she
goes out until the early morning and has lots of fun. Finally, she
falls in love with Otto Piffl, a young man from East Berlin and a
flaming Communist, and marries him surprisingly. When MacNamara
hears of this, he intrigues quite a bit with the help of his
assistant Schlemmer to get Piffl into an East German prison, but
when he also gets note of his Boss and wife coming over to visit
their daughter in Berlin, he needs to get Piffl out again, convert
him to Capitalism and present him as a fine young and noble
husband in order to get his London post, and all of that very
quick!
(Beverages), Telefilm (1997). Whisky Man: Inside the Dynasty
of Samuel Bronfman. (Montreal, QU: Telefilm, 48 minutes).
Bronfman, Sam; Seagram's.
http://www.telefilm.gc.ca/en/prod/tv/tv96/104.htm
(Beverages) (1998).
Biography - Coors (VHS; A & E Entertainment). From the
vision of Adolph Coors, a German immigrant who founded the company
in 1873, to the controversy that their staunch right-wing views
attract; how the beer developed a near-cult following in the west
before going nationwide; tragedies the Coors have overcome, how
they have handled accusations of racism, homophobia and unfair
labor practices.
(Beverages), Directed by Jonathan Nossiter (2003).
Mondovino
(DVD - 158 min.; New York, NY; Paris, FR: Goatwork Films/Films of the Crusades). Trained Sommelier. Globalization of the wine
industry. Three powerful Italian families and a powerful Napa
Valley newcomer struggle for winemaking dominance -
behind-the-scenes struggles of modern-day winemaking -
economic/cultural changes and disappearing traditions in today's
wine world. Criticizes Napa Valley and the "globalization" of fine
wines, Robert Mondavi Winery portrayed as corporate merchandiser.
(Beverages), Directed by Marc Francis, Nick Francis (2007).
Black Gold. (Fulcrum Productions Ltd., 78 min.). Ethiopia;
Coffee; Farmer; Business; Economics. Journey of world's coffee
trade, from consumers to farmers; 2 1/2 year tour of coffee fields
in Ethiopia by Tadesse Meskela, General Manager of the Oromia
Coffee Farmers Cooperative Union (represents 74,000 Ethiopian
farmers); conditions farmers work with, meager amounts of money
they make, while world gulps coffee.
http://www.blackgoldmovie.com/dvd.php
(Broadcasting), Directed by Walter Lang (1957).
Desk Set (DVD - 103 min.);
Desk Set (VHS -
103 min.). Bunny Watson (Katharine Hepburn) head the research
department at the Federal Broadcasting Company, a major TV
network. Assigned by the network president to introduce computers
into some of the department's functions, methods engineer" Richard
Sumner (Spencer Tracy) arrives to observe daily activities.
Unfortunately, however, Sumner is ordered to keep his mission
secret. As a result, the whole staff believes they are being
replaced. To make matters worse, there appears to be more than a
little electricity between Bunny and Sumner, which upsets Bunny’s
boyfriend Mike (Gig Young). As the tension mounts in the office,
so do the laughs in this classic romantic comedy.
(Business Growth and Influence), Directed by Jennifer Abbott,
Mark Achbar (2004).
The Corporation
(DVD - 145 min.; Vancouver, BC: Big
Picture Media Corporation). Documentary skewers
business - examines the far-reaching repercussions of the
corporation’s increasing preeminence, analyzes the nature of the
corporate institution, its impacts on the planet, and what people
are doing in response (based on Bakan's book "The Corporation: The
Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power"). 40 interview subjects:
CEOs and top-level executives from a range of industries and
disciplines (oil, pharmaceutical, computer, tire, manufacturing,
public relations, branding, advertising and undercover marketing);
in addition, a Nobel-prize winning economist, the first management
guru, a corporate spy, a range of academics, critics, historians
and thinkers. http://www.thecorporation.com/about/.
(Business Growth and Influence), Directed by Lori Cheatle,
Daisy Wright (2004). This Land Is Your Land. Look at the
impact of major corporations on American life, told largely from
the point of view of ordinary citizens. The film examines both
evident and lesser known areas of corporate influence, hears how
people across the country feel their own lives have been affected,
and looks at some of the brave, compelling and sometimes hilarious
ways in which individuals and communities are reacting.
(Business Services), Directed by Robert Altman (1971).
McCabe & Mrs. Miller
(DVD - 120 min.;
McCabe & Mrs. Miller
(VHS - 120 min.). Warren Beatty and Julie
Christie star - Charismatic but dumb John McCabe arrives in a
young Pacific Northwest town to set up a whorehouse/tavern. Mrs.
Miller, a professional madam, offers to use her experience to help
McCabe run his business, while sharing in the profits. Whorehouse
thrives, McCabe and Mrs. Miller draw closer, despite conflicting
intelligences and philosophies, town's mining deposits attract the
attention of a major corporation which wants to buy out McCabe
along with the rest. He refuses, and his decision has major
repercussions for him, Mrs. Miller, and the town.
(Business Services), Directed by Cameron Crowe (1996).
Jerry Maguire (DVD - 139 min.);
Jerry Maguire (VHS
- 139 min.); Gracie Films. Sports agent has a moral epiphany and
is fired for expressing it; decides to put his new philosophy ('he
owes his all to his client') to
the test as an independent with the only athlete who stays with
him.
(Capitalism), Directed by Lewis D. Collins (1935). Make a
Million (68 min.). A college economics professor's "radical"
ideas about capitalism get him fired. When he decides to put those
ideas into practice, he finds that they actually do generate him
huge amounts of money. Soon a local banker and others who scoffed
at his ideas see the amount of money he's making and try to cheat
him out of his system.
(Capitalism), Directed by Lindsay Anderson (1973).
O Lucky
Man! (VHS - 183 min.). This sprawling, surrealist musical serves as
an allegory for the pitfalls of capitalism, as it follows the
adventures of a young coffee salesman in Europe.
(Capitalism), Directed by Tim Forbes (1977). The Lions of
Capitalism ( 55 min.). Documentary.
(Capitalism), Directed by Pavel Lungin (2002).
Oligarkh (DVD
- 128
min.);
Oligarkh
(VHS -128 min.). Patterned after life of exiled Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky, once one of Russia's wealthiest and most notorious
businessmen (former mathematician bankrolled Yelsin's 1996
re-election campaign). Fictional account of rise and fall of
Platon Makovsky, post-Soviet businessman and power broke who, with
four friends during the Gorbachev years, jumped on the private
capitalism movement. 20 years later - Platon finds himself the
richest man in Russia, having sacrificed his friends to get to the
top. But with this cynical rise, came a brutal fall - in 2000
Putin vowed elimination of oligarchs. Makes Russia's reviled
business tycoons of the 1990's look sexy. Screenplay based on "The
Big Cut", best-selling novel by Yuli Dubov (head of Iogovaz, car
dealership set up by Berezovsky in the early 1990's).
(Capitalists), Directed by Tim Forbes (1977).
The Lions of Capitalism: Great American Millionaires. (VHS
- 55 min.). Chronicles the achievements of the great capitalists:
J.P. Morgan, Andrew Carnegie, Henry Ford and Ray Kroc. Orson
Welles, Robert McNeil and broadcaster Lowell Thomas narrate.
(Capitalists) (1998).
Biography - Andrew Carnegie (VHS; A & E Entertainment).
(Capitalists) (1998).
Biography - J. Pierpont Morgan (VHS; A & E Entertainment).
(Capitalists) (1998).
Biography - Vanderbilts (VHS; A & E Entertainment).
(Capitalists) (1999).
Warren Buffett Talks Business (VHS; PBS Home Video).
Filmed in late 1994 before an audience of business students at the
University of North Carolina.
(Capitalists), Directed by Lisa D. Gildehaus (2000).
Warren Buffett - Oracle of Omaha. (VHS - 60 min.;
Milwaukee, WI: Riveting Pictures). Documentary about billionaire
Warren Buffett and his annual shareholders meeting in Omaha,
Nebraska.
(Commodities), Directed by D. W. Griffith (1909).
A Corner
in Wheat (VHS - 14 min.). One-reel adaptation of Frank Norris novel
("The Pit"). Ruthless businessman tries to manipulate and corner
world market in wheat - disastrous impact on farmers and
consumers; gets trapped in a grain elevator, buried by avalanche
of grain. Film personalizes business and offers punishment when
pursuit of profit outweighs social conscience.
(Computers), Directed by Barry Levinson (1994).
Disclosure (DVD - 129 min.);
Disclosure (VHS - 129 min.). Tom Sanders (Michael Douglas)
a brilliant analyst for the Digicom Corporation, a computer
company in Seattle, Washington. Happily married with two young
children, Tom had big hopes for a promotion to the top brass by
his boss, Bob Garvin (Donald Sutherland). Unstead, it goes to
Meredith Johnson (Demi Moore), Tom's seductive ex-girlfriend.
Somehow Tom takes it with a grain of salt, until a personal
meeting turns unto a night seduction when Meredith decides to
relive her sexual fantasy and pick up from where they left off.
Tom refuses and shoves her away, making Meredith completely
frustrated. Tom only choice is to sue Meredith for sexual
harassment. But then everyone in the company believes it was the
other way around and his boss wants to transfer him to an another
division, forcing him to lose everything Tom has ever gained. But
Tom's not going down without a fight. He has only four days to
confess his innocence, save his marriage, and his job. Can he do
it? Does he stand a chance?
(Computers), Directed by Guy Evans (2002). The King of
Capitalism: Thomas Watson and IBM. TV Documentary.
(Computers), Directed by Mick Jackson (2002).
The First $20 Million Is Always the Hardest
(DVD - 105 min.);
The First $20 Million Is Always the Hardest (VHS-105 min.).
Andy, a successful marketing guy quits his job, because he feels
disconnected with the values about work he learned from his
father. He gets a new job at a top notch research facility, where
he quickly makes a powerful enemy who makes him volunteer for a
nearly impossible project: The $99 Personal Computer. He recruits
the only available guys at the lab, three sociopaths. Together
they really compile a revolutionary PC for $99, but then they
become the victims of a venture capitalist and Andy's old foe from
the research lab. Can he and his new friends find a way to
overcome the problems?
(Construction), Directed by Bill Ferehawk, Bill Kubota (2002).
Lustron: The House America's Been Waiting For (57 min.). TV
Documentary - rise and fall of engineering visionary Carl Strandlund and his post-World-War-II brainchild, the Lustron
porcelain-enameled-steel manufactured house (same material used
to construct gas stations and White Castle restaurants).
(Corporate Culture, Directed by Nunnally Johnson (1956).
The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. (DVD - 153 min.);
The
Man in the Gray Flannel Suit. (VHS - 153 min.). Corporate
culture emerging in the years following the second World War. Tom
and Betsy Rath (Gregory Peck and Jennifer Jones), a young suburban
Connecticut couple with three healthy children, a nice home, a
steady income. Tom finds himself caught up in the corporate rat
race, confronts his past and future, decides his family is more
important than the offer of a new job.
(Corporate Culture), Directed by Ron Howard (1986).
Gung Ho
(DVD -
112 min.);
Gung Ho
(VHS - 112 min.). Michael Keaton stars as Hunt Steven, liaison between an
American car manufacturing plant and Japanese managers - must
mediate the clash of work attitudes between the foreign management
and native labor; finds himself having to justify his own job,
forced to choose between redundancy or the seemingly inhuman
Japanese work ethic that the new owners have brought with them.
(Corporate Culture), Directed by Philip Kaufman (1993).
Rising Sun (DVD - 129 min);
Rising Sun (VHS - 129
min). (Los Angeles, CA: Twentieth Century Fox). Corporations,
Japanese--California--Los Angeles--Drama;
Japanese--California--Los Angeles--Drama; Corporate
culture--Japan--Drama; Corporate culture--California--Los
Angeles--Drama; Business intelligence--California--Los
Angeles--Drama; Murder--California--Los Angeles--Drama;
Legislators--California--Los Angeles--Drama. At the offices of a
Japanese corporation, during a party, a woman, who's evidently a
professional mistress, is found dead, apparently after some rough
sex. A police detective, Web Smith is called in to investigate but
before getting there, he gets a call from someone who instructs
him to pick up John Connor, a former police Captain and expert on
Japanese affairs. When they arrive there Web thinks that
everything is obvious but Connor tells him that there's a lot more
going on. Connor discovers that the woman was kept by Eddie
Sakamura, the son of a man Connor knew in Japan. And while Web
thinks that they should bring Eddie in, Eddie asks Connor for some
time to prove his innocence. Connor gives it to him, cause he is
beholden to Eddie's father. But when evidence shows that Eddie's
the killer, Connor and Smith are in hot water with their
superiors, and when they try to get Eddie, a high speed chase
ensues with Eddie getting killed. But Connor still thinks that
there is something funny going on, especially when he discovers
that the evidence they were given is false.
(Disaster), Directed by Steven Zaillian (1998).
A Civil
Action (DVD - 112 min.);
A Civil
Action (VHS - 112 min.). Jan Schlittman (Travolta) agrees to
represent eight families whose children died from leukemia after
two large corporations leaked toxic chemicals into the water
supply of Woburn, Massachusetts - case becomes his obsession, to
the extent that he is willing to give up everthing - including his
career and his clients' goals, in order to continue the case
against all odds.
(Disaster), Directed by Mahesh Mathai (1999).
Bhopal Express
(DVD - 100 min.).
(Bombay, IN: Highlight Films). Drama about a newlywed
couple whose lives are changed on the night of December 2,1984.
Tons of toxic gas (methyl isocyanate) leaked from a Union Carbide
plant in Bhopal, India, killing 4,000 people overnight, 8,000
people in its immediate aftermath and causing multi-systemic
injuries to over 500,000 residents; created
the largest industrial disaster ever -- a disaster still being
felt by the people of Bhopal. This film is a striking
interpretation of the circumstances of the tragedy.
(Disaster), Directed by Steven Soderbergh (2000).
Erin
Brockovich (DVD - 130 min.);
Erin
Brockovich (VHS - 130 min.). Erin Brockovich (Julia Roberts) is an
unemployed single mother, desperate to find a job, but is having
no luck. This losing streak even extends to a failed lawsuit
against a doctor in a car accident she was in. With no
alternative, she successfully browbeats her lawyer to give her a
job in compensation for the loss. While no one takes her
seriously, with her trashy clothes and earthy manners, that soon
changes when she begins to investigate a suspicious real estate
case involving the Pacific Gas & Electric Company. What she
discovers is that the company is trying quietly to buy land that
was contaminated by hexavalent chromium, a deadly toxic waste that
the company is improperly and illegally dumping and, in turn,
poisoning the residents in the area. As she digs deeper, Erin
finds herself leading point in a series of events that would
involve her lawfirm in one of the biggest class action lawsuits in
American history against a multi-billion dollar corporation.
(Economics) (1950). How to Lose What We Have. Political
parable urging continued emphasis on a free-market economy rather
than resorting to government takeover of business - whether
through communism or fascism. The promise of ideals such as full
employment is contrasted with accompanying sacrifices in private
choice.
(Economics), Produced/Directed by Suman Ghosh (2003).
Amartya Sen: A Life Reexamined. (Brooklyn, NY: First Run/Icarus
Films, 56 minutes). Department of Economics (Florida Atlantic
University). Documentary about the life and work of Amartya Sen,
the 1998 Nobel Laureate in Economics (for Social Choice Theory),
first Asian to win the coveted prize since it was first awarded in
1969. Film framed by a conversation between Sen and Professor
Kaushik Basu, Sen's student and fellow economist, interspersed
with commentary from other Nobel Laureates, renowned scholars, and
politicians who have a close understanding of the life and work of
Amartya Sen. Director examines assumptions behind Sen's Social
Choice Theory, captures the on-the-ground reality of rural
literacy programs, on which Sen has pinned such great hope and
trust for the improvement of the lives of poverty stricken masses.
(Economics-Consumerism-Credit), Directed by James D. Scurlock
(2005).
Maxed Out (DVD - 90 min). Consumer credit--United States;
Debt--United States. Journey deep inside American debt-style,
where everything seems okay as long as the minimum monthly payment
arrives on time. Shows how modern financial industry really works,
explains true definition of "preferred customer", tells why poor
are getting poorer, rich getting richer.
(Electronics), Directed by Billy Wilder (1954).
Sabrina (DVD - 112 min.); .
Sabrina (VHS - 113
min.). Sabrina (Audrey Hepburn) is the young daughter of the Larrabee family's chauffeur who has been in love with David
Larrabee (William Holden) for all her life. David is very spoiled
and crazy for women, and has been totally ignoring Sabrina for
years. When Sabrina goes to Paris for a few years, she returns a
very attractive and sophisticated woman, and David is quickly
drawn to her. David's brother Linus (Humphrey Bogart) sees this
and fears that David's imminent wedding with a very rich woman may
be endangered. If the wedding is canceled, so will a great
corporate deal with the bride's family. So, Linus tries to keep
Sabrina away from his brother, and the best way to do so is by
charming her himself.
(Electronics), Directed by Sydney Pollack (1995).
Sabrina, (DVD - 127 min.);
Sabrina (VHS - 127
min.). Sabrina (Julia Ormond) is the young daughter of the
Larrabee family's chauffeur who has been in love with David
Larrabee (Greg Kinnear) for all her life. David is very spoiled
and crazy for women, and has been totally ignoring Sabrina for
years. When Sabrina goes to Paris for a few years, she returns a
very attractive and sophisticated woman, and David is quickly
drawn to her. David's brother Linus (Harrison Ford) sees this and
fears that David's imminent wedding with a very rich woman may be
endangered. If the wedding is canceled, so will a great corporate
deal with the bride's family (developed reviltionary flat-screen
TV technology). So, Linus tries to keep Sabrina away from his
brother, and the best way to do so is by charming her himself.
(Electronics), Directed by Don Hardy Jr. (2006). Sound Man:
WW II to MP3, 58 min.). Documentary film about Jack Mullin,
developed magnetic tape recorder. Soldier with Signal Corps
stationed in England during World War II, discovered German
Magnetophones; returned to U. S., reassembled, improved, modified
(added dc biasing); August 1947 - awarded contract
to record, edit Bing Crosby's "Philco Radio Time" program on ABC
radio; became linchpin for U.S. recording industry (voices of Bing
Crosby, Les Paul, others saved for future generations). Interviews
with Les Paul, Greg Kihn, Chuck D., Stephen Stills, Bing Crosby's
widow Kathryn, Mullin's friends and family.
(Entertainment), Directed by Allan Moyle (1995).
Empire
Records (DVD - 90 min.);
Empire
Records (VHS - 90 min.). Independent music store in dire trouble of
being sold to a large chain, Music Town. After Lucas, an employee,
fails to raise money to buy the store, employees band together to
do so.
(Entertainment), Directed by Miki Mistrati, Thomas Stockholm
(2001). Porno på Vrangen. TV Documentary - portrait of the
Danish porn business which generates millions of kroners. It takes
a closer look at those who make a lot of money on pornography,
e.g. the gas stations, video stores, hotels, and not the least the
phone companies.
(Entertainment), Directed by Barry Avrich (2004).
The Last
Mogul: The Life and Times of Lew Wasserman. (Washington, DC:
(distributed by) ThinkFilm, Washington, DC). President, CEO (Echo
Advertising). 110 min. Documentary traces growth of entertainment
business from vaudeville roots through silent pictures, talkies,
radio and television to modern global entertainment conglomerates.
Based on original material and NOT on any previously published
books.
(Entertainment), Director/Writer, Susan Steinberg (2007).
Atlantic Records: The House That Ahmet Built (DVD - 120
min.); Thirteen/WNET and Warner Music Group. "The Atlantic Sound"
sprang from the small record label Ertegun co-founded in 1947.
Follows Ertegun's remarkable career and its impact on the
evolution of the world's most popular musical genre while offering
an insider's look at the recording industry. Original PBS
documentary features rare, private and classic clips, as well as
performances and studio sessions with such Atlantic recording
artists as Solomon Burke, Ray Charles, Eric Clapton, Phil Collins,
Aretha Franklin, Mick Jagger, Kid Rock, Ben E. King, Led Zeppelin,
& many more.
(Entrepreneurship), Directed by Charles Shyer (1987).
Baby
Boom (DVD - 110 min.);
Baby
Boom
(VHS - 110 min.). Diane Keaton stars as a successful New York
business woman, known as the "tiger lady", gets news of an
inheritance from a relative from another country - not money, a
baby girl. Gradually gets attached to the child, gets fired, moves
to a two story cottage in Vermont, gets bored one snowy day and
decides to make apple sauce, baby loves it, she decides to sell
it, becomes a new product sensation, falls in love with a local
veterinarian.
(Entrepreneurship), Directed by Chris Hegedus, Jehane Noujaim
(2001).
Startup.com. (DVD - 103 min.);
Startup.com (VHS - 103 min.). Documentary
of the rise and fall of an Internet business. Traces the birth and
failure of new media company govWorks.com, Web site for people to
conduct business with municipal governments, from May 1999 -
December 2000. Tests relationship of two best friends. Kaleil raises the money, Tom's the technical chief. A third
partner wants a buy out; girlfriends come and go; Tom's daughter
needs attention. And always the need for cash and for improving
the site. Venture capital comes in by the millions. Kaleil is on
C-SPAN, CNN, and magazine covers. Will the business or the
friendship crash first?
(Fashion & Beauty), Directed by William Dieterle (1934).
Fashions of 1934, 78 min.). William Powell and Bette Davis
star - Sherwood Nash, a swindler who bootlegs Paris fashions for
sale at cut-rate prices, and his assistant try to steal the latest
Baroque designs but hidden cameras capture them. Threat and
counter threat lead to the suggestion of putting on a legitimate
show.
(Fashion & Beauty), Directed by Alexander Mackendrick (1951).
The Man in the White Suit
(DVD - 85 min.);
The Man in the White Suit
(VHS - 85 min.). Alec Guinness stars as
a man who invents a fabric that won't get dirty or wear out. But
he seems to have made more enemies than friends in the process -
established garment manufacturers try to suppress it.
(Fashion & Beauty), directed by David Teboul (2004).
Yves
Saint Laurent - His Life and Times (DVD - 77 min.; Empire Pictures).
Documentary on precocity and swift rise of designer (born in
1936), connected to Radziwill family (Lee Radziwill one of YSL's
earliest supporters after he was dropped by Dior).
(Fashion & Beauty), Directed by David Teboul (2004).
Yves
Saint Laurent - 5, Avenue Marceau, 75116 Paris (DVD - 85
min.; Empire
Pictures). Documentary (from book of same name) focuses
exclusively on process - creation of YSL's last women's
collection in 2001 (YSL observes the meticulous work of
dressmakers fitting models). Seduction vs. elegance.
(Finance), Directed by David Davis (2001). Electric Money,
114 min.). Documentary - Bob Cringely tells the story of the
invention of the credit card and how it has evolved into the
trillion-dollar-a-year business; examines how information
technology expanded futures, options, and stock trading.
(Food), Directed by William Keighley (1940). Torrid Zone,
88 min.). James Cagney and Ann Sheridan star as a banana company
executive on a Caribbean plantation group tries to convince his
former co-worker to take over the plantation No. 7 and to ramrod
his company's fruit harvesting outfit in Central America.
(Food) (1987).
Biography - Milton Hershey: The Chocolate King (VHS; A & E
Entertainment).
(Food), Directed by Giles Foster (1988).
Consuming Passions (VHS - 98 min.); (London, UK: Euston
Films). Chocolate industry--Great Britain--Drama; Big
business--Great Britain--Drama. At his new job at Butterworth
Chocolates, Mr. Farris accidentally knocks several workers into a
mixing vat, the contents of which are then sent to market. When
reviews of the company's new candy come back, they are
overwhelmingly negative, except for the areas that received the
'special ingredient'. Farris soon finds himself assigned the task
of obtaining more of the ingredient to satisfy the nation's sweet
tooth.
(Food) (1998).
Biography - Kellogg Brothers (VHS; A & E Entertainment).
From the first corn flake to the 10-year legal battle over the
family name, this is the tumultuous story of the star-crossed
fortunes of the Kellogg brothers.
(Food Service), Directed by Michael Curtiz (1945).
Mildred Pierce (DVD - 111 min.);
Mildred Pierce
(VHS - 111 min.); Warner Bros. Pictures). Joan Crawford plays a
successful woman entrepreneur, divorcée who starts a small
restaurant and builds it into a prosperous chain—but can never win
the love of her daughter Veda (Ann Blyth).
(Food Service), Directed by Campbell Scott, Stanley Tucci
(1996).
Big Night, (DVD - 107 min.);
Big Night. (VHS - 109 min.). Immigrant struggle to attain
the American Dream, set in New Jersey in the 1950s. Primo and Secondo are two brothers who have emigrated from Italy have come
to New Jersey to open a bistro named The Paradise that serves the
finest in traditional, authentic Italian cuisine. Their every move
is foiled by rival restaurant Pascal's, which serves mile-high
servings of spaghetti and meatballs and flasks of bad Chianti at
exorbitant prices. Primo is the irascible and gifted chef,
brilliant in his culinary genius, but determined not to squander
his talent on making the routine dishes that customers expect.
Secondo is the smooth front-man, trying to keep the restaurant
financially afloat, despite few patrons other than a poor artist
who pays with his paintings. The owner of the nearby Pascal's
restaurant, enormously successful (despite its mediocre fare),
offers a solution - he will call his friend, a big-time jazz
musician, to play a special benefit at their restaurant. Primo
begins to prepare his masterpiece, a feast of a lifetime, for the
brothers' big night...
(Food Service) (1998).
Biography: Dave Thomas Made to Order (VHS; A & E Home
Video). Guy behind the Wendy's fast-food empire; began with
Kentucky Fried Chicken and invented the famous bucket of chicken
with Colonel Sander's face on it. After leaving KFC, he started in
Wendy's commercials in 1989.
(Food Service) (2000).
Biography: Ray Kroc Fast Food (VHS; A & E Home Video).
(Forest Products), Directed by Vincent Sherman (1980).
Trouble in High Timber Country, 98 min.). Family owns a mining
and timber company, non-union union because they believe that they
are fair to their workers. When a corporation, whose intention is
to strip the business and leave hundreds of workers out of work,
makes an offer to buy their business, the patriarch rejects the
offer. Suitor instruct a union rep to organize one and institute a
strike. Family owners are left all alone to try and fill their
orders, cause they have a mortgage that's due, and they are
unwilling to concede.
(Globalization), Directed by Stephanie Black (2001).
Life and Debt. (DVD - 80 min.);
Life and Debt. (VHS -80 min.). Effects of globalization
and multinational corporations on the island of Jamaica, its
industry and agriculture. After England granted Jamaica
independence in 1962, the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) stepped in with a series of loans. These loans came
with strings attached--the kind that would eventually plunge the
country $7 billion into debt, stranded without the resources to
dig themselves out.
(Globalization), Directed by Mary Jane St. Vincent Welch
(2004). The Men Who Would Conquer China. (New York, NY:
First Run/Icarus Films, 78 min.). Exploits of New York banker Mart
Bakal and Hong Kong businessman Vincent Lee as they attempt to
launch a multinational venture in China over a three-year period.
(High Technology), Written by Robert X. Cringely (1996).
Triumph of the Nerds: The Rise of Accidental Empires in Silicon
Valley (DVD - 165 min.);
Triumph of the Nerds: The Rise of Accidental Empires in Silicon
Valley (Boxset: VHS -165 min.). PBS. Two-part documentary of the birth and growth of
the personal computer industry - how it developed from big limited
box to small advance GUI based machine. Bill Gates, Steve Jobs,
Xerox P.A.R.K researchers all speak about the PC.
(High Technology), Written by Robert X. Cringely (1996)
Triumph of the Nerds Vol. 1: Impressing Their Friends.
(VHS).
(High Technology), Written by Robert X. Cringely (1996).
Triumph of the Nerds Vol. 2. (VHS).
(High Technology), Written by Robert X. Cringely (1996).
Triumph of the Nerds, Vol. 3 - Great Artists Steal. (VHS).
(High Technology), Directed by Darren Aronofsky (1998).
Pi
(DVD - 84 min.);
Pi
(VHS - 84 min.). Computer whiz/genius mathematician builds a secret
supercomputer that provides something that can be understood as a
key for understanding all existence - both a Hasidic cabalistic
sect and a high-powered Wall Street firm learn of it and try to
seduce him.
(High Technology), Directed by Martyn Burke (1999).
Pirates
of Silicon Valley: The True Story of the Battle to Create the
Computer Age
(DVD - 95 min.);
Pirates
of Silicon Valley: The True Story of the Battle to Create the
Computer Age (VHS - 95 min.).History of
Apple and Microsoft. Semi-humorous documentary about the men who
made the world of technology what it is today, their struggles
during college, the founding of their companies, and the ingenious
actions they took to build up the global corporate empires of
Apple Computer Corporation and Microsoft Inc.
(High Technology), Directed and Produced by David Winton
(2000).
Code Rush: A Year in the Life of a Silicon Valley
Supernova, Netscape. (VHS - 60 min.). PBS film crew arrives at
Netscape's headquarters in 1998 to make hour-long documentary film
of Netscape's open-source-code strategy (underlying program
instructions to Netscape's browser) in hope of thwarting
competition from Microsoft's Internet Explorer - which Microsoft
was giving away). Netscape's goal - to get independent software
writers to create code for an irresistible version of Netscape's
browser which would become the industry standard. Film doesn't
answer question of how Netscape would benefit from giving away its
source code.
(High Technology), Directed by Tariq Jalil (2000). Dot.Com.
Day in the life of a Dot.Com company circa 2000.
(High Technology), Directed by Chris Hegedus Jehane Noujaim
(2001).
Startup.com
(DVD -107 min.);
Startup.com
(VHS -107 min.). Traces the birth and
failure of new media company govWorks.com (from May of 1999 to
December of 2000), a Web site for people to conduct business with
municipal governments.
(High Technology), Directed by Kal Deutsch. Sharon Zezima
(2002). Behind the Startup: Icevan.com, 6 min.).
Mockumentary profiles the rise and fall of an Internet startup,
called IceVan.com. The company offered "ice in an hour" delivery
and ice-related accessories, like tongs, buckets and gourmet ice.
(High Technology) (2004).
Biography - Bill Gates: Sultan of Software (DVD - 50 min.;
A & E Home Studio).
(Hospitality) (1998).
Biography - Conrad Hilton (VHS; A & E Entertainment).
Complete story of Hilton's colorful life, from his first hotel-a
rundown Texas inn, to his acquisition of the Waldorf Astoria.
Friends and family recall his early adventures, his friendships
with presidents, and his glamorous relationships with Hollywood's
elite. Rare photographs and archival film offer an inside look at
the unpredictable life that comes with extraordinary
success. Follow the blazing trail of the self-made man who became
the "innkeeper to the world."
(Hospitality) (2000).
Biography: J. W. Marriott (VHS; A & E Home Video). Inched
his way into corporate America a nickel root beer at a time. It
all began with a nine stool stand and grew to a billion dollar
hotel and restaurant corporation. Along the way he befriended
presidents and routinely gave back to those who'd helped him along
the way. A man of steep contradiction - at moments affable and
then severely critical of those he loved most. At turn of the
century titan of industry and real-life Horatio Alger...John
Willard Marriott.
(Insurance), Directed by Billy Wilder (1960).
The Apartment, (DVD - 125 min.).
The Apartment (VHS
- 125 min.). Insurance statistician C.C. "Bud" Baxter
advances his career by making his Manhattan apartment available to
executives in his company for their extramarital affairs. His
boss, Jeff D. Sheldrake, finds out and promotes Bud in return for
the exclusive use of the apartment for his own affair. When
Sheldrake's girlfriend turns out to be Fran Kubelik, a pretty
elevator operator Bud likes, he is heartbroken, but accepts the
arrangement. He often has to deal with the aftermath of their
visits and one night he's left with a major problem to solve.
(Knowledge Management), Directed by Ben Rock (1999). The
Meeting, 8 min.). Four businessmen have the greatest trouble
communicating. Yelling all at once is about the only thing they
can do and they're not getting an inch closer to their goal:
profit. One of the businessmen has an excellent idea. Why not use
a wind-up toy dog? Only the one who has the dog may speak. Peace
is restored, but not for long.
(Leisure), Producer - Murphy Entertainment Group (2000).
The Ringling Brothers: Kings of the Circus.
(VHS - 47 min.; Harrington Park, NJ - Janson Video). How poor boys from
Baraboo, Wisconsin became kings of the circus when the circus was
king - some exciting scenes from today's Ringling Bros. and Barnum
and Baily -- The Greatest Show on Earth -- plus a nostalgic trip
through the creation of the greatest entertainment empire the
world has ever seen.
(Media), Directed by Jason Ensler (2003).
Martha, Inc.: The Story of Martha Stewart (TV). (DVD - 120
min.);
Martha Inc.: The Story of Martha Stewart. (VHS - 120 min.). Portrait of a woman who is driven to succeed at any cost.
She has plenty of personal demons in her past to drive her:
loathing for her own poor New Jersey family, neighborhood and
upbringing, a critical and perfectionist father whom she spent a
lifetime trying to impress, a belief that money was her salvation
and the answer to everything. She sacrifices every personal relationship in her
life for this idol; friends, husband, family. In the end she
has an adoring public in love with a false image, carefully cultivated over
years in the spotlight.
(Oil), Directed by Jack Conway (1940).
Boom Town
(VHS - 119
min.). McMasters (Clark Gable) and Sand (Spencer Tracy) come to
oil towns to get rich. Betsey (Claudette Colbert) comes West
intending to marry Sand but marries McMasters instead. Getting
rich and losing it all teaches McMasters and Sand the value of
personal ties. Also stars Hedy Lamarr.
(Oil), Directed by Stuart Heisler (1949).
Tulsa. (DVD - 90 min.);
Tulsa. (VHS - 90 min.). It's Tulsa, Oklahoma at the start
of the oil boom and Cherokee Lansing's (Susan Hayward) rancher father is killed in
a fight with the Tanner Oil Company. Cherokee plans revenge by
bringing in her own wells with the help of oil expert Brad Brady
(Robert Preston) and childhood friend Jim Redbird. When the oil and the money start
gushing in, both Brad and Jim want to protect the land but
Cherokee has different ideas. What started out as revenge for her
father's death has turned into an obsession for wealth and power.
(Oil), Directed by Bill Forsyth (1983).
Local Hero. (DVD - 111 min.);
Local Hero. (VHS - 111 min.). Knox Oil and Gas billionaire Happer (Burt Lancaster) sends Mac (Peter Riegert) to a remote
Scottish village to secure the property rights for an oil refinery
they want to build. Mac teams up with Danny and starts the
negotiations, the locals are keen to get their hands on the
'Silver Dollar' and can't believe their luck. However a local
hermit and beach scavenger, Ben Knox (Fulton Mackay), lives in a
shack on the crucial beach which he also owns. Happer is more
interested in the Northern Lights and Danny in a surreal girl with
webbed feet, Marina. Mac is used to a Houston office with fax
machines but is forced to negotiate on Bens terms.
(Oil), Directed by Stephen Gaghan (2005).
Syriana. (DVD - 126 min.). A politically-charged epic
about the state of the oil industry in the hands of those
personally involved and affected by it. A missile disappears in
Iran, but the CIA has other problems: the heir to an Emirate gives
an oil contract to China, cutting out a US company that promptly
fires its immigrant workers and merges with a small firm that has
landed a Kazakhstani oil contract. The Department of Justice
suspects bribery and hires an outside firm to find a scapegoat.
The CIA also needs one when its plot to kill the Emir-apparent
fails. Agent Bob Barnes, the fall guy, sorts out the double cross.
An American economist parlays the death of his son into a contract
to advise the sheik the CIA wants dead. The jobless Pakistanis
join a fundamentalist group. All roads start and end in the oil
fields.
(Oil), Directed Paul Thomas Anderson (2007).
There Will Be Blood. (Los Angeles, CA: Paramount Vantage
and Miramax Films, DVD - 158 min.). Family, greed, religion, oil -
turn-of-the-century Texas prospector (Daniel Day-Lewis as Daniel
Plainview, silver miner turned oilman) in early days of Southern
California business in late-18th, early 19th centuries. Based on novel by Upton Sinclair, 'Oil'. 1898, Daniel Plainview (Daniel
Day-Lewis) is a determined prospector who strikes silver in Texas
and in subsequent searches discovers oil. By 1911 Plainview is a
self-proclaimed "oil man" who operates several wells with his
adopted son. When he's approached by Paul Sunday, who swears there
is oil literally seeping out of the ground on his father's ranch,
Daniel expands his business and begins buying up all of the
property in the area. Such aggression doesn't go unnoticed
however, and the ambitious businessman soon finds himself at odds
with larger oil companies and the fanatical local church led by
the guileful Eli Sunday (Paul Dano).
(Publishing), Directed by William Dieterle (1940). A
Dispatch from Reuters, 90 min.). Edward G. Robinson, Edna Best
and Eddie Albert star as nineteenth-century entrepreneur Julius
Reuter, starting with a small flock of carrier pigeons, turns his
small company into Europe's most respected news wire service.
(Publishing), Directed by Orson Welles (1941).
Citizen Kane
(DVD - 119 min.);
Citizen Kane
(VHS -119 min.). Joseph Cotton, Dorothy Comingore and Agnes Moorehead
star in the story of multimillionaire newspaper tycoon Charles
Foster Kane, one of the world's richest men, who dies alone in his
extravagant mansion, Xanadu, speaking a single word: "Rosebud".
Reporter tracks down the meaning of the word as Kane emerges as
sinister figure - a newspaper tycoon who tried to buy and sell
love, friendship, political influence. End of WW II: foreign
powers defeated , Nazism and fascism uprooted, film makers examine
evil within. Patterned after life of William Randolph Hearst.
(Publishing), Directed by Donald Brittain, Arthur Hammond
(1966). Never a Backward Step, 57 min.). Documentary -
profile of press tycoon and businessman, Lord Thomson.
(Railroads), Directed by Cecil B. DeMille (1939).
Union
Pacific (VHS -135 min.). Barbara Stanwyck and Joel McCrea star in
effort to push Union Pacific Railroad across the wilderness to
California (as specified in one of the last bills signed by
President Lincoln) while a financial opportunist hopes to profit
from blocking construction.
(Real Estate), Directed by Edgar Selwyn (1932).
Skyscraper Souls. (VHS - 99 min.). An entrepreneur will
let nothing stand in his way of acquiring a 100-story office
building. Aspirations and the
lives of several people working at the gigantic Seacoast National
Bank Building interweave in various plots. The most notable
character is David Dwight (Warren William), the womanizing bank
owner who keeps his estranged wife happy by paying for her
extravagant globetrotting. Dwight's long time secretary Sarah
yearns for them to divorce so her affair with him can be
legitimized. Sarah shows her good side by playing mother to the
young innocent Lynn Harding (Maureen O'Sullivan), who she employs
as an assistant. Beautiful Miss Harding is relentlessly pursued by
extroverted bank teller Tom Sheppard, but he is frustrated when
Dwight lures her away with power and wealth. Then Dwight ruins
everyone's finances in a successful bid to get full control of his
skyscraper by manipulating the company's stock price. Now there
doesn't appear to be anyone who can prevent the power monger from
taking advantage of the ingenue Harding-or is there?
(Real Estate), Directed by Roman Pulanski (1974).
Chinatown
(DVD -131 min.);
Chinatown
(VHS -131 min.). Los Angeles real estate mogul with dirty secrets - plot
to buy cheap, unwatered land for low prices, water the land, and
sell it for millions of dollars.
(Real Estate), Directed by Richard Michaels (1990).
Leona
Helmsley - The Queen of Mean (VHS -94 min.). Suzanne Pleshette,
Lloyd Bridges, Joe Regalbuto, Bruce Weitz - portrait of the rise
and fall of this New York real estate monarch who ruled Harry
Helmsley's life and empire with the cold-hearted style that earned
her the title - The Queen of Mean.
(Real Estate), Directed by James Foley (1992).
Glengarry
Glen Ross (DVD -100 min.);
Glengarry
Glen Ross (VHS -100 min.). Jack Lemmon, Al Pacino, Ed Harris, Alan
Arkin, Kevin Spacey , Alec Baldwin star in tough times in a New
York real estate office. The salesmen are given a strong incentive
to succeed in a sales contest -first prize is a Cadillac Eldorado,
second prize a set of steak knives, third prize the sack! There is
no room for losers in this dramatically masculine world; only
"closers" will get the good sales leads. There is a lot of
pressure to succeed, so a robbery is committed which has
unforeseen consequences for all the characters.
(Real Estate), Directed by Alan Handel (2000).
Faith and Fortune: The Reichmann Story. (New York, NY: First
Run/Icarus Films (info@frif.com), 92 min or 52 min.). Epic story
of a dynastic family that acquired staggering wealth, only to lose
it all in a real estate development gamble of astonishing
proportions at London's Canary Wharf.
(Real Estate) (2004).
Biography - Donald Trump - Master of the Deal (DVD - 50
min.; A & E Home Studio).
(Real Estate) (2004).
Biography - Donald Trump - Deal Maker (DVD - 50 min.; A &
E Home Studio).
(Retail - Apparel), Directed by Charles Crichton (1959). The
Battle of the Sexes (84 min.). Power struggle between a man
and woman. Martin is the faithful manager at the House of
MacPherson, a Scottish firm that's been turning out tweed the same
way for decades. When the new heir (Robert Morley) takes over, he
brings in a domineering efficiency expert (Constance Cummings), an
American no less, whose ideas threaten to ruin the company. Martin
is forced to act. While he seems like a quiet and unassuming sort,
he actually has a lot of guile and cunning beneath his
mild-mannered exterior. First he tries to get her fired, but when
that doesn't work he decides that more drastic measures are called
for - like murder. Martin comes up with what he believes is the
perfect plan, and all he has to do is carry it out.
(Retail - Department Store), Directed by Clarence Brown (1933).
Looking Forward, 82 min.). Lionel Barrymore stars in a
Depression Era story of a London department store owner facing
bankruptcy while his family fritters away money. A long-standing
employee gets fired but finds new life in a home-based bakery.
Last-minute reprieve saves the store and a new relationship is
forged between the men.
(Retail - Department Store), Josh Taylor (2001). Dita and
the Family Business, 58 min.). Great-grandson of founder of
the Bergdorf-Goodman. Documentary explores the colorful history of
the unique and glamorous 20th Century American family that founded
Bergdorf-Goodman's.
(Retail - Discount), Directed by Micha X. Peled (2001).
Store Wars: When Wal-Mart Comes to Town (VHS - 59 min.).
Store Wars: When Wal-Mart Comes to Town (DVD - 59 min.) Teddy Bear Films. Trade-offs between national and local retailing.
(Retail - Discount) (2004).
Biography - Sam Walton: Bargain Billionaire (DVD - 50
min.; A & E Home
Video).
(Retail - Discount), Directed by Robert Greenwald (2005).
Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price
(VHS - 95 min.). (New York, NY:
Brave New Films).
Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price (DVD - 95 min.)
Documentary look at the Documentary - impact of the retail giant on local
communities.
(Retail - Discount), Directed by Leni Rifenstahl (2005).
Why Wal-Mart Works: And Why That Drives Some People C-r-a-z-y.
(DVD - 72 min.). Fayetteville, AR: Hannover House.
Look at the thought process and emotion
behind the attacks on retail giant Wal-Mart.
(Retail - Specialty), Directed by John G. Adolfi (1931). The
Millionaire, 80 min.). Georeg Arliss and James Cagney star as
millionaire automaker retires upon the advice of his doctor, but
becomes so bored he buys half interest in a gas station and, with
a partner, compete against dishonest guy who sold the half
interest.
(Retail - Specialty), Directed by Don Sharp (1983).
A Woman of Substance. (DVD - 312 min);
A Woman of Substance. (VHS - 312 min.). Barbara Taylor
Bradford. Determined to ruin
the upper-class Fairley family who wronged her, Emma Harte (Jenny
Seagrove) aims to become one of the richest women in the world;
traces Emma's life from overworked Yorkshire maid to the
triumphant 79-year-old matriarch (Deborah Kerr) of a vast business
empire.
(Retail - Specialty), Directed by Don Sharp (1986).
Hold the
Dream. (DVD - 120 min.);
Hold the Dream. (VHS - 120 min.). Barbara Taylor Bradford
sequel to A Woman of
Substance. Paula Fairley (Jenny Seagrove) inherits and runs the
retail empire built by her grandmother, Emma Harte (Deborah Kerr)
Tale of dutiful, hard-working Harte versus undeserving, greedy
heirs set in the rather sterile world of 1980s New York City
penthouses and English country manors.
(Retail - Specialty), Directed by Tony Wharmby (1993).
To Be the Best. (DVD - 187 min.);
To Be the Best. (VHS -
187 min.). Barbara Taylor Bradford sequel to Hold the Dream. Paula O' Neill feuds with her cousins as she fights to
save her grandmother's business-and struggles to salvage her
marriage. Paula (Lindsay Wagner) comes into her own as a woman,
mother, wife, and businesswoman. Paula gets inveigled into a
series of compromising business situations in Hong Kong, it is her
dapper and debonair chief of security (Anthony Hopkins) who
repeatedly saves the day.
(Retail - Specialty) (2002).
Barbara Taylor Bradford's A Woman of Substance Trilogy (A Woman of
Substance / Hold the Dream / To Be the Best). (DVD - 700
min.). Charts the life of Emma Harte, from kitchen maid at the
beginning of the 20th Century, to respected business woman and
Grandmother in the 1980's. From humble beginnings Emma Harte
starts her business with a small shop, but over the next twenty
years she expands her stores and invests in the growing textile
industry in Leeds. By the time of World War 2, Emma is the head of
a major retail and manufacturing empire, but she has struggled all
her life to find love. After an illegitimate daughter and two
marriages, she finally meets the love of her life, Paul McGill,
but their affair is cut short by a tragic accident, leaving Emma
with his daughter. In the 1980's Emma faces one of her biggest
tests - her childrens attempt to remove her as head of her
company, but Emma is far from the senile old woman they think she
is - she is determined to stop them at all costs.
(Retail - Specialty), Directed by Nora Ephron (1998).
You've Got Mail, (DVD - 119 min.);
You've Got Mail.
(VHS - 119 min.). Joe Fox (Tom Hanks) is a cheerfully rapacious
merchant whose chain of book superstores is gobbling up smaller,
more specialized shops such as the children's bookstore owned by
Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan). Their lives run in close parallel in
the same idealized neighborhood, yet they first meet anonymously,
online, where they gradually nurture a warm, even intimate
correspondence. As they begin to wonder whether this e-mail
flirtation might lead them to be soul mates, however, they meet
and clash over their colliding business fortunes.
(Retail - Specialty), Directed by Julian Jarrold (2005).
Kinky Boots. (DVD - 107 min.). Charlie Price (Joel
Edgerton) is a young guy with big dreams outside
of Northampton. Suddenly, his father's death forces him to
leave London and return home to resume his father's role
and take over the family business, something he has dreaded most
of his life. He discovers the business is in turmoil and
has to come up with a radical idea that will save everyone's job.
With the help of a popular drag queen (Chiwetel Ejiofor), Charlie
decides to switch gears and start making women's shoes, shoes that are strong enough for a man.
(Rubber), Directed by Daniel B. Gold, Judith Helfand (2001).
Blue Vinyl: The World's First Toxic Comedy. (DVD - 98
min.). Search for truth behind the vinyl industry. Documentary
filmmaker Judith Helfand, upset that her parents are re-siding
their house with blue vinyl, sets out to discover how vinyl is made and why, according to some
scientists, it is the most hazardous of synthetic materials. She
meets industry representatives who tell her the key chemical
ingredient in vinyl, chloride, is no more toxic than table salt.
She also travels to Venice, Italy, to meet with families of vinyl
factory workers dead or dying from chemical exposure, and she
visits an intrepid, Louisiana attorney who has sued American vinyl
manufacturers on behalf of severely injured former employees.
(Sales), Directed by Alex Segal (1966).
Death of a Salesman (DVD - 120 min.);
Death of a Salesman
(VHS - 120 min.). Lee J. Cobb and George
Segal star in abridged (by the author) 1966 television adaptation
of Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Arthur Miller. Cobb portrays the
suffering Willy Loman--the middle-aged man at the end of his
emotional rope, a salesman desperately hustling for a living as he
slides into old age. Mildred Dunnock plays his patient wife,
Linda, while George Segal and James Farentino play their
disillusioned sons, Biff and Happy. A visit from Biff brings old
hopes and boiling resentments to the surface.
(Sales), Directed by Barry Levinson (1987).
Tin Men (DVD - 110 min.);
Tin Men (VHS - 110 min.) (Bandai Films, Silver Screen
Partners III, Touchstone Pictures). Set in 1960s
Baltimore, Tin Men focuses on the rivalry between two aluminum
siding salesmen, BB Babowsky (Richard Dreyfus) and Ernest Tilley
(Danny DeVito) at a point when the industry was loaded with scam
artists. Government probe investigates their sales history and
threatens to shut them down.
(Sales), Directed by Roger Donaldson (1990).
Cadillac Man (DVD - 97 min.);
Cadillac Man (VHS -
97 min.); (Orion Pictures Corporation). Day in the life of Joey O'Brien
(Robin Williams), a shameless used-car salesman with a weakness
for women. Has two days to sell 12 cars or he loses his job. The
audience watches the comings and goings of the many women who make
Joey confused and finally poor: his mistress,
his ex-wife, the office sexpot, the faithful saleswoman. Jealous husband (Tim Robbins)
crashes through a plate-gas window in a motorcycle wielding
a machine gun. Williams tries to use
his sales tactics, and some heart-rending honesty, to talk Robbins
out of killing them.
(Sales), Directed by Whit Stillman (1994).
Barcelona (DVD - 101 min.);
Barcelona (VHS - 101 min); Castle Rock Entertainment. Ted Boynton is a stuffy
white guy from Illinois working in sales for the Barcelona office
of a US corporation which makes motors. His somewhat less stuffy
cousin Fred, an officer in the US Navy, pays an unexpected visit.
Over the next few months their lives are irrevocably altered by
the events which follow Fred's arrival. They grapple with sexual
revolution and anti-Americanism in Spain.
(Sales), Directed by Stanley Jacobs (1999). Pitch People,
87 min.). Documentary on infomercials and the art of the "pitch".
The men and women who have perfected this craft and how they make
a livelihood selling various products by way of a visual
demonstration make up a world unfamiliar to most people.
(Sales), Directed by John Swanbeck (1999).
The Big Kahuna. (DVD - 90 min.);
The Big Kahuna. (VHS - 91 min.). Two industrial lubricant
salesmen (Danny DeVito and Kevin Spacey) and a company researcher
(Peter Facinelli) set up shop in a hotel’s hospitality suite in
Wichita, Kansas, on a business trip to host a delegates’ party.
The main aim is to get the business of one particular big
customer. They hope to sell their particular brand of industrial
lubricants to the elusive Mr. Fuller. Spacey and DeVito are
seasoned pros, while Facinelli is excited about his first business
trip. DeVito is going through some kind of mid-life crisis; Spacey
is all about the sale and little else; and the new kid is naive,
moral, and extremely religious. When it becomes apparent that it
is the lad who has developed a direct line to the guy, his strong
religious beliefs bring him into sharp conflict with his older and
more cynical colleagues.
(Scandal), Directed by Alfred E. Green (1933). I Loved a
Woman, 90 min.). Edward G. Robinson and Kay Francis star - art
student interrupts his studies in Greece to head his father's meat
packing business on his father's death, marries social climber
who taunts him for his ideals regarding worker happiness and meat
purity, begins supporting the musical career of singer, sells
tainted meat to the Army during the Spanish American war, is
investigated, indicted, flees to Greece.
(Scandal), Directed by John McTiernan (1968).
The Thomas
Crown Affair (DVD - 113 min.);
The Thomas
Crown Affair (VHS - 113 min.). Steve McQueen and Faye
Dunaway star -
Self-made billionaire Thomas Crown has a seldom hobby: steals
priceless masterpieces of Art. After the theft of a famous
painting from Claude Monet, the only person suspecting Thomas
Crown is Catherine Banning. Her job is to get the picture back, no
matter how she accomplishes her mission.
(Scandal), Directed by Robin Spry (1977).
One Man.
(VHS - 87
min.). Jason Brady, crusading Montreal TV reporter, finds his life ripped apart
as he investigates a story about a company's deadly criminal
negligence - carnage happening to children due to the criminally
negligent behavior of a local factory, a division of the powerful,
multi-national Konrad Corporation, concerning its handling of a
deadly chemical called B.A.P. Reporter has to face the
corporation's underhanded efforts to silence him, but also the
turmoil with his own family as he gets so emotionally involved in
the story and the social worker that he is alienating his wife.
Eventually, events lead to a point that forces him to make
sacrifices he could not anticipate.
(Scandal), Directed by Coline Serreau (1989). Romuald et
Juliette, 108 min.). Company president gets framed with a
food-poisoning scandal and the only person who can help him is the
evening cleaning-woman - who always seems to be at the right place
at the right time.\
(Scandal), Directed by Michael Mann (1999).
The Insider
(DVD -157 min.). Al Pacino, Russell Crowe, Christopher Plummer star -
Based on a true story about a CBS 60 Minutes-episode in 1994 on
malpractices in the tobacco industry - former research biologist
for Brown & Williamson, Jeff Wigand, won't talk to "0 Minutes"
producer Lowell Bergman. When B & W pressures Wigand to honor a
confidentiality agreement, he gets his back up. Trusting Bergman
and despite a crumbling marriage, he goes on camera for a Mike
Wallace interview and risks arrest for contempt of court.
Westinghouse is negotiating to buy CBS, so CBS attorneys advise
CBS News to shelve the interview and avoid a lawsuit. "60 Minutes"
and CBS News bosses cave, Wigand's hung out to dry, Bergman is
compromised, and the CEOs of Big Tobacco may get away with
perjury. Can the truth will out?
(Scandal), Directed by John McTiernan (1999).
The Thomas
Crown Affair, (DVD - 113 min.);
The Thomas
Crown Affair (VHS - 113 min.). Pierce Brosnan and Renee Russo star -
Self-made billionaire Thomas Crown has a seldom hobby: steals
priceless masterpieces of Art. After the theft of a famous
painting from Claude Monet, the only person suspecting Thomas
Crown is Catherine Banning. Her job is to get the picture back, no
matter how she accomplishes her mission.
(Scandal), Directed by Penelope Spheeris (2003). The Crooked
E: The Unshredded Truth About Enron, 100 min.). Rise and fall
of the Enron company, as seen from the perspective of employee
Brian Cruver, based on his book.
(Scandal), Directed by Alex Gibney (2005).
Enron: The
Smartest Guys in the Room, 110 min.). Documentary - story
behind the infamous Enron scandal: top executives from the 7th
largest company in this country walked away with over one billion
dollars, left investors and employees with nothing. The film
features insider accounts and rare corporate audio and video tapes
that reveal colossal personal excesses of the Enron hierarchy and
the utter moral vacuum that posed as corporate philosophy. The
human drama that unfolds within Enron's walls resembles a Greek
tragedy and produces a domino effect that could shape the face of
our economy and ethical code for years to come.
(Steel & Iron), Directed by Per Lindberg (1940). Stål.
Forshyttan steel-mill has been owned by the Ancker family for
generations. But competition is hard. When the son Bengt Ancker
comes back from abroad he has an idea for success: a lighter steel
with better quality. But more development money is needed and the
only way to raise it is to sell the company to their competitor -
Manchester Steel Company. But the workers are worried that this
could threaten their job-security.
(Strategy), Directed by Jan Marlyn Reesman (1992).
California Hot Wax, 89 min.). Three Southern Californian woman
lose their successful business to their evil landlord. They team
up with a handsome hunk to start a competitive car wash, using
scantily-clad girls and guys to lure in customers. The ensuing
rivalry leads to various antics by the old landlord to put them
out of business.
(Strategy), Directed by Tom Booker, Jon Kean (1999).
Kill
the Man (VHS - 88 min.). Two owners of the Long Shot Copies shop
struggle against a copying giant, King Co. Having gotten their
start from a $100,000 windfall when one of them hit a promotional
mid-court basketball shot, they have to find a way to keep their
company afloat or fold. Thus starts a series of gimmicks and a war
against the opposition, particularly after they are visited by a
corporate thug (Phil LaMarr).
(Succession), Directed by Robert Wise (1954).
Executive
Suite (VHS - 104 min.). Avery Bullard, President of the Tredway
Corporation died without naming a successor. The Board members
must choose a replacement. The most likely is Loren Shaw, a
skilled businessman, but some of the others don't like his
calculating ways. But to stop him, they'll have to find someone
else they can back. Will it be the engineer Don Walling? That will
take convincing, they don't trust his youth and idealism. And he
isn't even sure he wants the job, he might be happier creating
rather than politicking.
(Textiles), Directed by Alexander Mackendrick (1951).
The Man in the White Suit. (DVD - 85 min.);
The Man in the White Suit. (VHS - 85 min.). The
unassuming, nebbishy inventor Sidney Stratton (Alec Guiness)
creates a miraculous fabric that will never be dirty or worn out.
Clearly he can make a fortune selling clothes made of the
material, but may cause a crisis in the process. After all, once
someone buys one of his suits they won't ever have to fix them or
buy another one, and the clothing industry will collapse
overnight. Nevertheless, Sidney is determined to put his invention
on the market, forcing the clothing factory bigwigs to resort to
more desperate measures...
(Tobacco), Directed by Michael Curtiz (1950). Bright Leaf,
110 min.). Melodrama about tobacco wars of late 19th century -
1894, Brant Royle shocks the aristocratic tobacco growers of
Kingsmont by planning to mass-produce cigarettes.
(Tobacco), Directed by Christine Fugate (1998). Tobacco
Blues, 55 min.). Documentary - looks at four tobacco-farming
families in Kentucky, to see how they are dealing with the current
situation. Tobacco is a cash crop not easily replaced in the poor
Appalachian region where most tobacco is grown. The farmers want
the public to realize that they are not evil--the farmers are just
trying to make a living the best way they know how. But while the
tobacco companies continue to increase their overseas production,
over 125,000 tobacco farmers are projected to lose a significant
portion of their income during the next 5 years. This documentary
looks at how the four families are coping with the possible loss
of their farms, their livelihoods, and their lifestyle.
(Tobacco), Directed by Michael Mann (1999).
The Insider
(DVD - 157 min.);
The Insider (VHS
- 157 min.). Blue Lion Entertainment. True story of Jeffrey Wigand (Russell
Crowe), a man who signed a confidentiality agreement before
getting fired from a big tobacco company. Hotshot *60 minutes*
producer Bergman (Al Pacino) asks Wigand to decipher some
technical documents, soon realizes there's a bigger story hiding
inside Wigand. On top of that, Wigand is recruited to testify in
Mississippi for a case that claims cigarettes *are* addictive. The
*60 minutes* piece will eventually be pulled because of corporate
pressure. Wigand deals with his personal dilemma, and Bergman
battles the corporation.
(Toys), Directed by Ere Kokkonen (1969). Leikkikalugangsteri,
88 min.). Two toy manufacturers fight for market share.
(Utilities), Directed by Michael Chandler (2001). Blackout,
57 min.). Documentary examines the current chaotic state of the
electric-power market in the United States, and its effects on
California and the rest of the nation.
(Wall Street), Directed by Howard Bretherton (1932). The
Match King, 79 min.). Fictionalized account of scandalous and
fraudulent life of Ivan Krueger - rises from Chicago janitor to
global monopolist.
(Wall Street), Directed by Mark Robson (1960).
From the
Terrace (DVD - 149 min.);
From the
Terrace (VHS - 149 min.). Paul Newman as Alfred Eaton, an ambitious
young executive who rises to partnership in a old line Wall Street
investment banking firm - as his marriage (Joanne Woodward)
crumbles. At the brink of attaining his career goals, he is forced
to choose between business success, while remaining married to the
beautiful, but unfaithful Mary, and starting over with his true
love, the much younger Natalie.
(Wall Street), Directed by Arthur Hiller (1963).
The Wheeler Dealers. (VHS - 107 min.). Henry Tyroon (James
Garner) comes to New York from Texas with a lot of oil money to
play with in the stock market. He meets stock analyst Molly
Thatcher (Lee remick) and the two fall in love.
(Wall Street - M&A), Directed by Akira Kurosawa (1963). Tengoku to jigoku,
143 min.). Executive mortgages all he owns to stage a coup and
gain control of the National Shoe Company, with the intent of
keeping the company out of the hands of incompetent and greedy
executives. He needs the same money, though, to pay the ransom
that will possibly save a child's life. His resolution of that
dilemma -- the certain loss of the company vs. the probable loss
of the child -- makes for one distinct drama, and an ensuing
elaborate police procedure makes for a second.
(Wall Street), Directed by Ivan Passer (1978). The Silver
Bears (DVD - Not available);
The Silver Bears (VHS - EMI Films, 113 min.). Financial
wizard "Doc" Fletcher (Michael Caine) sent by crime boss Joe
Fiore (Martin Balsam) to buy bank in Switzerland to
more easily launder their profits. When he arrives, Fletcher finds
that the bank, acquired by his associate Prince di Siracusa (Louis
Jourdan), consists of some shabby offices above a restaurant. To
make up for this, the Prince suggests that Fletcher invests in a
silver mine owned by Shireen and Agha Firdausi (Stéphane Audran
and David Warner). This solves one problem, but the mine also
attracts the attention of some of the most powerful people in the
silver business. Fletcher must pull out all his wheeler-dealing
skills in order to keep hold of everything he's worked for, in the
process romancing a banker's discontented wife (Cybill Shepherd).
Based on book by Paul Erdman.
(Wall Street - M&A), Directed by Guy Green (1979). Jennifer: A Woman's
Story (TV), 120 min.). Elizabeth Montgomery stars as the widow
of a wealthy executive battles schemes by factions of the board of
directors as she fights to keep control of his shipbuilding
company.
(Wall Street - Commodities), Directed by John Landis (1983).
Trading Places (DVD - 118 min.);
Trading Places