HomeMovies Casino Jack and the United States of Money

Casino Jack and the United States of Money

R

MPAA Rating: R
Contains:Mild Language

See full product details
Choose a format:
Previous
  • DVD   $17.43
  • Previously Viewed - DVD   $5.73
  • Used - DVD   $6.85

Used - DVD

Usually Ships Within 48 Hours.

List Price: $10.49

$6.85 You Save: $3.64

Add to Cart Add to Wish List Share with a Friend
Check Store Availability
Next
Get Adobe Flash player
  • Overview
  • Format Details
  • Edtitorial Reviews
  • Cast & Production Credits
Casino Jack and the United States of Money

Theatrical Release Date: 2010 05 07 (USA - Limited)

UPC: 876964003131

Studio: Magnolia

MPAA Rating: R   Contains:[Mild Language]

Summary: Lobbyists have long played a powerful role in American politics, but it wasn't until Jack Abramoff became the center of a 2006 corruption scandal with ties to leading members of Congress (and even the White House) that many became aware of just how deep and pernicious their influence truly was. The son of a wealthy businessman, Abramoff became a Republican activist in college, involved in programs to raise funds for GOP candidates and supporting political movements in Angola and South Africa that he believed promoted a free-market ideology. In 2001, Abramoff took control of a profitable gaming empire after the murder of casino owner Gus Boulis, while also operating a lobbying business that curried political favor among Republican politicians through money and expensive gifts (one of his leading allies was GOP party whip Tom DeLay). However, when Abramoff was discovered to have defrauded a number of Native American groups hoping to open gambling casinos with promises of political favors that could be obtained for the right price, his empire came crashing to the ground, taking a number of important reputations along with it. Filmmaker Alex Gibney chronicles the rise and fall of Jack Abramoff and the often bizarre story of how his political and financial ambitions took root in the documentary Casino Jack and the United States of Money, which includes interviews with a number of his associates and rare newsreel footage of his early years as a political gadfly. Casino Jack and the United States of Money was an official selection at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Category: Culture & Society

Awards: Film Presented – Sundance Film Festival Film Presented – Hot Docs International Film Festival Film Presented – Full Frame Documentary Film Festival

Features: Deleted scenes
Extended interviews
New York premiere q&a
A conversation with Alex Gibney
Webisodes
"I'm Just a Bill"
Lobbying 101
Commentary with director Alex Gibney

Casino Jack and the United States of Money

Format: DVD

Release Date: 09/14/2010

Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Alternate Wide Screen

Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1

Runtime: 118 Minutes

Sides: 1

Number of Discs: 1

Language(s) English

Subtitles: Spanish

Region: USA & territories, Canada

Chapters: Disc #1 -- Casino Jack and the United States of Money
1. Jack Who? [7:11]
2. The College Republicans [9:01]
3. Freedom Fighters [6:21]
4. Christian Coalition [9:51]
5. Treasure Island [10:25]
6. Saipan Rescue [10:08]
7. Indian Country [9:51]
8. Gimme Five [9:58]
9. E-mail [13:25]
10. SunCruz [16:06]
11. Tangled Web [12:36]
12. End Credits [3:18]

Derek Armstrong

Alex Gibney remains on top of his game with Casino Jack and the United States of Money, but some of the urgency can't help but seem lost on this particular outing. That's an admittedly strange comment, given that 2010 also saw the release of a feature film about Jack Abramoff, George Hickenlooper's Casino Jack. Yet even Gibney's usual thoroughness and incisiveness can't create the same impact as his previous documentaries, particularly Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room and Taxi to the Dark Side -- which could result from our collective need to move on from Bush-era malfeasance more than a year after George W. left office. Whether Gibney's film was timely or merely an historical footnote, there's no doubt it captures an intricate network of culpability, which may have started out as merely stretching the spirit of the rules, but resulted in outright corruption on a broad scale. Demonstrating his usual commitment to following every lead wherever it takes him, Gibney interviews numerous characters involved in some way with Abramoff's lobbying schemes. Through this he paints a picture of na?fs who didn't recognize that Abramoff was inducing them into wrongdoing, crooks who clearly did, and a lot of folks who fell into the gray area in between. Perhaps the most interesting thing that emerges is the personal narrative of Abramoff himself. Before his lobbying days, his roles were as diverse as chairman of the College National Republicans and producer of Red Scorpion, the anti-Soviet Dolph Lundgren action movie. Even as The United States of Money buries a stake in the heart of Bush-era entitlement, Gibney ends on a note of sardonic irony. With an image of disgraced former congressman Tom DeLay waltzing across the stage on Dancing With the Stars, Gibney seems to wonder, "Who really got the last laugh?" ~ Derek Armstrong, Rovi

Cast and Crew: Alex Gibney  Director 
Alex Gibney  Producer 
Alex Gibney  Screenwriter 
David Robbins  Composer (Music Score) 
Mark Cuban  Executive Producer 
Todd Wagner  Executive Producer 
Alison Ellwood  Producer 
Jeff Skoll  Executive Producer 
Diane Weyermann  Executive Producer 
Benjamin Goldhirsch  Executive Producer 
Bill Banowsky  Executive Producer 
Zena Barakat  Producer 

Country: USA