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Ripped Off: Madoff and the Scamming of America

A&E Video // Unrated // July 28, 2009
List Price: $19.95 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Jason Bailey | posted August 26, 2009 | E-mail the Author
THE MOVIE:

In the streamlined (if somewhat simplified) opening of Ripped Off: Madoff and the Scamming of America, it is noted that "he puts a face on what we've all been feeling." It's a succinct and accurate characterization of the man who ran an elaborate, decades-long Ponzi scheme, bilking countless private investors and charities out of an estimated $65 billion dollars. The disclosure of his fraud, in the midst of the worst economic landscape since the Great Depression, grafted the face of a real-life villain onto the greed and excess of the Bush years--it's hard to personify (or even understand) a credit default swap or a NINA loan, but this was a guy that we could point at and say, "Him! Get him!"

The History Channel's short documentary examination of the Madoff scandal utilizes interviews with journalists, historians, and victims, in addition to some excellent archival footage (particularly those chilling tapes of Madoff holding court in the late 1990s as a wise elder statesman of the financial world). The special contains some valuable biographical information, not only of Madoff's humble beginnings as a Queens-born stock broker, but of Carlo Ponzi (the namesake of the Ponzi scheme) and other con artists who operated in Madoff's style, though perhaps not to his excess.

There's plenty of solid information to be found here--how the lure of the Madoff investment was its exclusivity (he didn't let just anyone throw away their money with him) and it's slow steady performance (one victim notes, quite convincingly, "this was not a get-rich-quick scheme"); the tale of Harry Markopolis, the financial analyst who attempted, for the better part of a decade, to alert the SEC that Madoff was a crook; and the tragic story of Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet, the hedge fund operator who responded to the news that his fund's $1.4 billion investment with Madoff wasn't worth the paper it was printed on by slashing his wrists in his Manhattan office.

The documentary moves a breakneck pace, a flurry of images and definitions and images and soundbites, though for all of the information it contains, it occasionally sacrifices nuance for the sake of a quick pulse. The misfortune of Ripped Off is that it follows Frontline's superior examination of the scandal, The Madoff Affair, into the marketplace; that program was simply stronger, with better access to more people on the inside and a more in-depth analysis of the Madoff story. Taken on its own terms, however, Ripped Off is a solid, if less than spectacular, television documentary program.

THE DVD:

Video:

Ripped Off continues History's irritating history of non-anamorphic presentations of widescreen programs. The 1.78:1 image is letterboxed inside the full frame; I'm not sure why they won't step up their game on this front. The image itself is passable, though somewhat messy--bits of the archival material are understandably rough, but many of the darker interviews and clips are muddy and somewhat crushed.

Audio:

The 2.0 audio is about as expected for a TV doc--clear, audible, appropriate. Interviews and narration are crisp, while music is well-modulated and unobtrusive. It's not exactly an exciting mix, but it does the job just fine.

Extras:

The History Channel has been kind enough to include an entire bonus documentary (though, to be fair, if we were being asked to pony up twenty clams for just the 47-minute Ripped Off, the title might take on some extra dimension). Crash: The Next Great Depression? examines the causes and consequences of our most recent economic breakdown, all the while comparing and contrasting with the 1929 crash and the ensuing Great Depression. It's a thoughtful, enlightening show with some excellent analysis (in fact, probably a slightly better program than Ripped Off) and an excellent addition to this disc.

FINAL THOUGHTS:

Ripped Off: Madoff and the Scamming of America is a little thin, and suffers in comparison with other, more in-depth documentaries about the Madoff swindle. But it is still worth seeing, and the DVD's bonus documentary provides additional insight and context for this con man who became the recipient of bile and loathing from across the nation.

Jason lives in New York. He holds an MA in Cultural Reporting and Criticism from NYU.

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