The Clearstream Affair
The Clearstream Affair
| 11 February 2015 (USA)
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Journalist Denis Robert sparked a storm in the world of European finance by denouncing the murky operations of banking firm Clearstream. His quest to reveal the truth behind a secret world of shadowy multinational banking puts him in contact with an ever-expanding anti-corruption investigation carried out by Judge Renaud Van Ruymbeke. Their paths will lead them to the heart of a political/financial intrigue, which will rock the foundations of Europe and the French government itself.

Reviews
BroadcastChic

Excellent, a Must See

Calum Hutton

It's a good bad... and worth a popcorn matinée. While it's easy to lament what could have been...

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Edwin

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Celia

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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blanche-2

"The Clearstream Affair" from 2014 is the true story of Denis Robert, played here by Gilles Lellouche, a journalist who persisted in his fight to prove the dishonest practices of the banking firm Clearstream. Since a lot of politicians and higher-ups are involved, he has a hard time of it, especially since witnesses are too afraid to come forward. But the more he finds out, the worse the scandal becomes, and he finds himself embroiled in dozens of lawsuits for libel.This is a real David v. Goliath story, and we don't see how it actually ended - that's told in the chirons at the end of the film.There was an emphasis on Robert's dealing with his family, which I could have done without - the actual story of the invisible bank accounts, the raven list, etc., and betrayal from the inside is interesting in its own right.I thought this could have been better, though it is a compelling story of corruption at the very top and how hard it is for someone attempting to get at the truth.

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TomSawyer 2112

This is such an important movie, to understand how difficult it is to reveal dark finance. If you are not an insider, it's not that easy to understand how far some seemingly unimportant erased data by a computer administrator can lead to high security state affairs, elections, terrorism, assassinations.See no evil, speak no evil, hear no evil, these are the foundations of success in Luxembourg's Banking were Clearstream could develop strategies to hide names in transactions. As there is nothing wrong, there's no need for control mechanisms either. If you happen to know to much, if you get caught by remorse, you just get laid off, deprived of work, or even promoted.The important role of auditing companies to cover up, is not forgotten. Arthur Anderson audited Clearstream, permitting the luxemburger Prosecutor to close the case. One of their employees got dismissed, and Andersen was convicted of obstruction of justice for shredding documents related to its audit of Enron. No biased conclusions, please.The depiction of the Luxemburg's mentality, made of personal interest and cowardliness not to get involved, especially on the level of Justice, is excellent. So is the acting of luxemburger actors. Denis Robert, the french journalist, doesn't realize he's engaging a Don Quixotte fight. His sources get treated not as witness, but as accused. How true, how disillusioning. What's worse, his revelations get out of control and mislead to fool ongoing investigations.This is such an important movie, to understand why investigative journalism is dying, as their sources can't be protected. You better have no children and wife, if you intend to be a whistle-blower.Personally, I'd kept my mouth shut.

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meilleuretradu

I speak French, but watched this with a friend who does not, and we both enjoyed it very much. It's suspenseful and the casting is excellent. Gilles Lelouche drives the movie as a determined and gutsy left-wing journalist who never seems to get nervous (as the viewer does when he meets his "sources" in shady locales). It was also fun to spot Charles Berling again in another good role after Ridicule. Laurent Capelluto is convincing and mysterious in his role as as a financier accused of fraud. In fact, all of the characters are memorable. The cinematography is also beautiful, with rarely seen shots of Luxembourg. Yes, this is based on a true story. Watch it!

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mcusiman24

the movie was an important story of bank corruption and money laundering. My review is from a filmmaker's point of view. Most filmmakers would turn movie about banks, computer screens, and courts into a crushing boring movie. Considering that the filmmaking of this story was just tremendous. The cinematographer and whoever did location scouting got some breathtaking landscapes as backgrounds. Most people would film the reporter was on the phone against some gray wall. But that one scene he had him in a dead end alley covered with this beautiful colored graffiti. When he gets a lead and takes off on the highway the movie kicks with dramatic rock and roll music. The story was suspenseful without any car chases or shootouts.

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