Disclosure (1994) unfolds inside the high-pressure corridors of a tech corporation racing toward a major product launch and an industry-shifting merger. Tom Sanders, a seasoned executive, begins the story confident in his path forward. His career is steady, the promotion he’s been waiting for is within reach, and the company’s future looks bright. Then, in a single moment, everything tilts.

Meredith Johnson enters like a storm he never saw coming. Once part of Tom’s past, she returns with ambition sharp enough to cut through every expectation. She takes the promotion meant for him and quickly rewrites the power dynamics of the office. What follows is a confrontation in a closed room that becomes the pivot of the film—a moment Tom believes is an assault on his dignity, and a moment Meredith later claims is his misconduct.

As the lawsuit erupts, the company becomes a labyrinth of shifting alliances, corporate secrets, and coded intentions. Tom finds himself walking a tightrope between defending his name and uncovering a larger scheme hiding behind the scandal. The film builds tension through polished boardrooms, strategic whispers, and the quiet hum of technology that both empowers and traps the characters.

Michael Douglas carries Tom with a tense blend of frustration and determination, while Demi Moore gives Meredith an icy confidence that keeps the audience guessing at her motives. Their dynamic creates a charged atmosphere, where every glance feels loaded and every conversation hides a deeper message. Donald Sutherland’s presence adds another subtle layer of authority and uncertainty.