Sour Grapes | |
Based On: | Rudy Kurniawan |
Music: | Lionel Corsini |
Cinematography: | Simon Fanthorpe |
Editing: | James Scott |
Studio: | Met Film, Faites Un Voeu |
Distributor: | Dogwoof, London |
Runtime: | 85 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Sour Grapes is an American crime documentary about wine fraudster Rudy Kurniawan. Filmmakers Jerry Rothwell and Reuben Atlas debuted the documentary at film festivals in October 2016 and on Netflix the following month.[1] [2]
A documentary about the fine and rare wine auction market centering around a counterfeiter who befriended the rich and powerful and sold millions of dollars of fraudulent wine through the top auction houses.
In alphabetical order; credits adapted from IMDb
Rudy Kurniawan was a rich Indonesian wine collector with a fascination for Burgundy, and he spent millions of dollars on wine and also sold countless bottles of fake wine. Acker Merrall & Condit, an auction company, broke records by selling worth of Kurniawan's wines in 2006 (equivalent to about $M in). In 2008, the firm held a sale at a Manhattan restaurant, promising the wines would be authenticated by "some of Burgundy's most discerning connoisseurs." Included were alleged bottles of Domaine Ponsot Clos Saint-Denis from the years 1945, 1949 and 1966, but an estate proprietor revealed that that particular wine had not been produced until 1982. In 2012, the Federal Bureau of Investigation raided Kurniawan's house in Arcadia, Los Angeles and discovered his wine fraud, whereby he collected empty bottles and refilled them with cheaper wine and then forged the labels.[3] In 2014, he became the first person in the United States to be convicted of the crime, and was given a ten-year sentence by a New York federal judge.[4] [5] Kurniawan declined to be interviewed for the documentary.
The Hollywood Reporter stated the filmmakers "thoroughly and concisely detailed the progression of Kurniawan’s fraud in a style that merges an Antiques Roadshow-style fascination with rare wines with a Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous-type fixation on the spending habits of the overly affluent."[6]