Investing News

4 Must-Watch Movies for Accountants

Fact checked by Kirsten Rohrs Schmitt
Reviewed by Ebony Howard

Klaus Vedfelt / Getty Images

Klaus Vedfelt / Getty Images

Accountants usually only make the headlines or have their stories told on the big screen for the misdeeds in which they have played a part.

These four films bring to light some of the darkest examples of greed and corruption and show how important ethics are to maintaining a financial system that is constantly hanging in the balance.

Key Takeaways

  • “In Debt We Trust: America Before the Bubble Bursts” explains how we all got so deep in debt.
  • “Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room” explores one of the biggest frauds of modern times.
  • “Unraveled” shows how Wall Street’s smartest got conned.
  • “The Shawshank Redemption” exposes corruption in the prison system.

In Debt We Trust: America Before the Bubble Bursts

Debt has become a way of life for Americans, and this 2006 documentary is a wake-up call to a younger generation that cannot stop living life in the red. The film digs deep into the economic and political policies responsible for transforming the U.S. economy from reliance on manufacturing to dependence upon consumerism and debt.

At the time of the film’s release, it was estimated that Americans owed more than $10 trillion of consumer debt. (By the third quarter of 2024, it had grown to $17.94 trillion.) “In Debt We Trust” exposes and explains a system operating on borrowed money and borrowed time, and informs us that it is only a matter of time before the whole system collapses.

The film takes a critical look at the long-term effects of wide-scale debt abuse, such as the increasing inequality in wealth between the few mega-rich and the rest of us.

Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room

The Enron scandal was one of the most egregious and disastrous recent financial scandals and is the subject of the documentary “Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room.”

The filmmakers assemble a lot of video footage from congressional hearing testimony and feature candid interviews with Enron executives Mike Muckleroy and Sherron Watkins, who blew the whistle on the company’s many illegal schemes.

The film features stories of what Enron traders were doing behind the scenes to keep their jobs and make money at any cost.

“The most shocking material in the film involves the fact that Enron cynically and deliberately created the phony California energy crisis of 2000-2001,” film critic Roger Ebert wrote. “There was no shortage of power in California. According to the documentary, Enron shut down between 30% and 50% of California’s energy industry at one time or another—up to 76% at one point—just to drive the price of electricity nine times higher.”

Important

Marc Dreier swindled some of New York’s most experienced investors.

Unraveled

Bernie Madoff may have grabbed bigger headlines for his giant Ponzi scheme, but Marc Dreier’s massive fraud—which netted $380 million from the hedge funds of New York’s most prominent investors—makes for quite an entertaining film.

Through interviews with Dreier in his Manhattan penthouse, where he was under house arrest at the time of filming, we learn about his elaborate scheme in great detail.

Dreier headed a 238-person law firm. He was the only person there who understood the financial details of the company’s deals. Through forgeries and impersonations, Dreier swindled some of Manhattan’s most experienced investors, until a savvy receptionist blew the whistle on him.

The Shawshank Redemption

The hero of “The Shawshank Redemption”, Andy Dufresne, is not just another accountant in prison. He proves that knowing obscure tax loopholes can actually save your life and maybe even help you escape from prison.

After being wrongfully sentenced to life in prison for murdering his wife and her lover, Andy gets extra protection from the prison guards by preparing their tax returns. After his eventual escape from the Shawshank prison, he implicates the corrupt warden for years of illegal bookkeeping.

How Much Household Debt Do Americans Have?

According to the Federal Reserve’s Household Debt and Credit Report, Americans have $17.94 trillion in household debt as of Q3 2024.

Is Household Debt Rising?

Yes, the amount of household debt continues to rise, according to the Federal Reserve’s Household Debt and Credit Report.

How Much Delinquent Household Debt Do Americans Have?

Of the total household debt in the United States, 3.5% is “in some stage of delinquency,” the Federal Reserve’s Household Debt and Credit Report found.

The Bottom Line

These must-watch movies and documentaries for accountants teach the importance of ethics in a world driven by greed and financial power.

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