Park Avenue: Money, Power and the American Dream is a 2012 Alex Gibney's film based on Michael Gross's book "740 Park: The Story of the World’s Richest Apartment Building"
Trailer of Park Avenue: Money, Power & The American Dream
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There are 15 films with the same director, 8842 with the same cinematographic genres, 8199 films with the same themes (including 515 films with the same 3 themes than Park Avenue: Money, Power & The American Dream), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
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, 2h10 Directed byAlex Gibney OriginUSA GenresComedy, Documentary ThemesFilms about computing, Politique, Documentaire sur les médias, Documentaire sur une personnalité, Documentary films about politics, Documentary films about technology, Political films ActorsAlex Gibney, Michael Moore Rating68% The 1989 WANK worm attack on NASA computers, originally thought to threaten the Galileo spacecraft, is depicted as the work of Australian hackers, including Assange. The founding of Wikileaks in 2006 is followed by coverage of several key events: its 2009–2010 leaks about the Icelandic financial collapse, Swiss banking tax evasion, Kenyan government corruption, toxic-waste dumping, Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning's communications with Adrian Lamo, uploads to Wikileaks of the Iraq and Afghanistan war documents, diplomatic cables, and video, exposure to the FBI by Lamo, and the accusations of sexual assault made against Assange. Interview subjects include Julian Assange, Chelsea Manning, Heather Brooke, James Ball, Donald Bostom, Nick Davies, Mark Davis, Jason Edwards, Timothy Douglas Webster, Michael Hayden, Adrian Lamo, J. William Leonard, Gavin MacFadyen, Smári McCarthy, Iain Overton, Kevin Poulsen and Vaughan Smith.
March 20, 2000, a decree by the President of the Republic of Cameroon set up an Operational Command Unit to tackle rampant banditry in the Douala region. The Unit introduced what amounted to round-ups: in one year, 1600 people disappeared or were killed. One year later, nine young men disappeared. The matter was submitted to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. The accused were found guilty of "failure to follow orders" and released but legal proceedings have not come to an end. The victims' families have to live between the desire for justice and the pressure for the crimes to be wiped out forever from the collective memory.