Samurai and Idiots: The Olympus Affair
Samurai and Idiots: The Olympus Affair
| 01 January 2014 (USA)
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In October 2011, Michael Woodford was suddenly ousted as CEO of Olympus Corporation, a multi-billion dollar Japanese optical company. What followed was international media furor which exposed one of the biggest scandals in Japanese corporate history. The film chronicles the saga of egregious corporate malefactors and a doomed East-West clash.

Reviews
Manthast

Absolutely amazing

HottWwjdIam

There is just so much movie here. For some it may be too much. But in the same secretly sarcastic way most telemarketers say the phrase, the title of this one is particularly apt.

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Doomtomylo

a film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.

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Blake Rivera

If you like to be scared, if you like to laugh, and if you like to learn a thing or two at the movies, this absolutely cannot be missed.

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l_rawjalaurence

Hyoe Yamanoto's documentary, filmed over a five-year period, offers an exposé of Olympus, the long-established Japanese camera firm which tried to compensate for its heavy losses during the Nineties and Noughties through a series of shady deals.The man to expose them was the British-born Michael Woodford, who took over as the company's CEO and discovered that large sums of money had been spent on acquiring apparently worthless companies. Confronting his Japanese co-director on the subject, he was informed in no uncertain terms that the entire affair had little or nothing to do with him, and that he should leave well alone. Unable to take this advice, for fear of alienating the company's overseas shareholders, Woodford embarked on a campaign of uncovering the misdemeanors, aided and abetted by articles published in an obscure financial journal by a Japanese journalist.Superficially this was another tale of big business deliberately sacrificing its integrity in pursuit of survival. Perhaps more significantly, however, it focused on the difficulties experiences between two cultures - the openness of Woodford contrasted with what he perceived as the secrecy (some might say two-facedness) of his Japanese colleagues. Perhaps he was unable - or unwilling - to accept the interrelationship between personal and political that dominates Japanese society; often to expose some misdeeds involves sacrificing one's honor, which is something that many Japanese business people seemed reluctant to admit.Hence the documentary in a sense had two cross-currents; on the one hand it tried to be an exposé, telling the truth about capitalist corruption; yet simultaneously it was about two cultures trying and failing to understand one another. This lack of comprehension doesn't say much for the future of global business transactions.

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