Short of money, the inventor Thomas Edison is captivated by the
charismatic figure of J.P. Morgan, the 'world's banker'. Accepting
Morgan's offer of almost unlimited cash in return for helping the man
change the way the world does business, Edison sees himself descend from
being a godlike inventor to becoming complicit in the invention of the
electric chair. Ever more enmeshed in Morgan's personal life, he becomes
infatuated by a world of privilege and power, where duty and desire,
faith and immorality are thrown into conflict, ultimately threatening
his own spiritual and creative survival.