Martin Shkreli, a notorious financial entrepreneur and pharmaceutical tycoon from Brooklyn, is portrayed in a documentary as the most hated man in America.Martin Shkreli, a notorious financial entrepreneur and pharmaceutical tycoon from Brooklyn, is portrayed in a documentary as the most hated man in America.Martin Shkreli, a notorious financial entrepreneur and pharmaceutical tycoon from Brooklyn, is portrayed in a documentary as the most hated man in America.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations total
Martin Shkreli
- Self - 'Pharma Bro'
- (archive footage)
Travis Langley
- Self - Professor of Psychology, Henderson State University
- (as Dr. Travis Langley)
Aaron Kesselheim
- Self - Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
- (as Dr. Aaron Kesselheim)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Ok so not what I expected. I wasted $6.99 renting this via iTunes. Whilst it did explain what the issue is I didn't get anything else out of it other than regular comparisons of Martin to the Joker from Batman due to his grin. He is absolutely odd though.
A documentary about Martin Shkreli? Sure, why not? The guy briefly became "the most hated guy in America". He drew attention to pharmaceutical price gouging with his own cack-handed attempt at the rort. He was convicted of securities fraud. And his weirdness alone should almost guarantee a watchable film. Unfortunately, Pharma Bro manages to take everything interesting about Shkreli and squander it in a muddle-headed exercise in something that veers wildly between trolling and hero-worship. Director Brent Hodge does himself no favours in putting himself front and centre in this half-arsed search for answers about Shkreli. In fact, he starts to seem like a mini-me Martin, as needy, as self-absorbed, as irrational and as amoral as Shkreli himself. For commentary on he relies heavily on the likes of Milo Yiannopoulos (someone as widely loathed as Shkreli), a rapper friend of Shkreli's who turns out not to be that much of a friend, an ex-girlfriend who wasn't even that much of a girlfriend and a WuTang Clan rapper so incoherent that he should have been subtitled. None of it is very revealing. Hodge actually seems to have a secret crush on Shkreli, which is the only way to interpret his efforts to paint Shkreli as a colourful cartoon super-villain - a kind of cross between Lex Luthor and The Joker. It's a cute conceit, but it does little to illuminate the seriously awful things Shkreli did, much less shed any light on Shkreli's motivations or personality flaws. Pharma Bro feels a bit like documentary-making for the TikTok generation. But even that makes it sound more interesting than it is. Don't waste your time.
Probably not in the sense you are thinking. The guy making the documentary thinks hes trolling martin, but trolling insinuates some sort of 'poking the bear' of sorts. Instead, this 'troll' documentary creator is actually just a shy stalker.
Save your time and watch a different documentary about Martin S. I didn't know much about him to begin with, but this doc does not explain much about him or his legal troubles. It seems the documentarian wanted himself to be the subject of this film, and did a bad job telling any sort of story. I have it a 2 instead of 1 star, simply because I enjoyed the wu tang interviews. It has more hipster kids trying to make something deep without understanding actual life experience. This doc is one you should skip.
This documentary is terrible. The "filmmaker" comes off as an obsessed stalker seeking fame. There's nothing new or interesting in this. Glad I caught it streaming free.
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- Runtime1 hour 25 minutes
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- 16:9 HD
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