>
$11 Trillion Quietly Moved - Americans Will Freeze & Obey When Market Collapse Hits : Chase Hughes
Econ 101 - 2026 Early Economic Forecast
Buy'r breaks the Blackrock monopoly- How the corporate club controls America
An AI Expert Warning: 6 People Are (Quietly) Deciding Humanity's Future! We Must Act Now!
Build a Greenhouse HEATER that Lasts 10-15 DAYS!
Look at the genius idea he came up with using this tank that nobody wanted
Latest Comet 3I Atlas Anomolies Like the Impossible 600,000 Mile Long Sunward Tail
Tesla Just Opened Its Biggest Supercharger Station Ever--And It's Powered By Solar And Batteries
Your body already knows how to regrow limbs. We just haven't figured out how to turn it on yet.
We've wiretapped the gut-brain hotline to decode signals driving disease
3D-printable concrete alternative hardens in three days, not four weeks
Could satellite-beaming planes and airships make SpaceX's Starlink obsolete?

ABOUT THE FILM
Yale University, 1961. Stanley Milgram (Peter Sarsgaard) designs a psychology experiment that remains relevant to this day, in which people think they're delivering painful electric shocks to an affable stranger (Jim Gaffigan) strapped into a chair in another room. Disregarding his pleas for mercy, the majority of subjects do not stop the experiment, administering what they think are near-fatal electric shocks, simply because they've been told to. Milgram's exploration of authority and conformity strikes a nerve in popular culture and the scientific community. Celebrated in some circles, he is also accused of being a deceptive, manipulative monster. His wife Sasha (Winona Ryder) anchors him through it all.
CAST & CREW
Cast:
Peter Sarsgaard
Winona Ryder
Jim Gaffigan
Edoardo Ballerini
Kellan Lutz
Dennis Haysbert
Danny Abeckaser
Taryn Manning
Anton Yelchin
John Leguizamo