Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps PG-13
Gordon never gives up.
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DVD Details
- Rated: PG-13
- Run Time: 2 hours, 13 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: December 21, 2010
- Originally Released: 2010
- Label: 20th Century Fox
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Michael Douglas, Shia LaBeouf, Frank Langella, Carey Mulligan & Josh Brolin | |
Performer: | Eli Wallach, Austin Pendleton, Sylvia Miles & Susan Sarandon | |
Directed by | Oliver Stone | |
Edited by | David Brenner & Julie Monroe | |
Screenwriting by | Allan Loeb & Stephen Schiff | |
Music Performer: | Brian Eno & David Byrne | |
Composition by | Craig Armstrong | |
Produced by | Eric Kopeloff & Edward R. Pressman | |
Director of Photography: | Rodrigo Prieto | |
Executive Production by | Alessandro Camon, Celia D. Costas & Alex Young |
Memorable Quotes and Dialog:
"Greed, for lack of a better word, is good."
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 2/5 --
A complete mish-mash, less bonfire than oven-lighter, a wasted opportunity...
Full Review
Daily Telegraph (UK)
This film misses its own story. It's a middle-brow male weepy, and no more. Money never sleeps, but you might. I can't say I didn't enjoy a little doze myself.
Full Review
The Spectator
It's a perfectly fine movie that could have been above-average good but was wrecked by too much story clutter and messy editing.
Full Review
Cinesnark
Stone portrays the financial meltdown of 2008 in bravura fashion, depicting the downfall of fictional investment bank Keller Zabel with a sweep and dynamism that few other contemporary US directors can match.
Sight and Sound
Rating: 3/5 --
Stone swaps fury for fun. But it sure beats another Fidel Castro interview.
Little White Lies
Mr. Douglas sustains a sense of nasty fun as the former snake with the lizardly name...
Wall Street Journal
Douglas reprises his role with such relish it's hard to resist....There are plenty of strong performances, and LaBeouf does a nice job of becoming the tough-skinned pragmatist.
USA Today
Product Description:
Ambitious young investment banker Jacob Moore (Shia LaBeouf) discovers that greed is still the name of the game when he forges a fragile alliance with onetime Wall Street hotshot Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) shortly after Gekko is released from prison. Having served eight years for securities fraud, money laundering, and racketeering, Gekko emerges from prison to find that his daughter, Winnie (Carey Mulligan), prefers to remain estranged, and that his former Wall Street cohorts are still raking in the cash. Flash-forward to 2008, and Winnie is dating a proprietary trader named Jake Moore (LaBeouf), who expresses a passion for green energy while working for his mentor Louis Zabel (Frank Langella), of Keller Zabel Investments. Despite heading up one of the most prominent investment firms in the country, Louis Zabel is forced to personally fight for the future of Keller Zabel before the Federal Reserve after the company's stock takes a hit due to persistent rumors that it's being dragged down by debt. Denied a bailout from the government, Keller Zabel soon falls victim to a hostile takeover lead by powerful investment bank partner Bretton James (Josh Brolin), of Churchill Schwartz. His job on the line and his mentor out of the picture, Jake discovers that Gordon Gekko is out promoting his new book "Is Greed Good'" and decides to attend a lecture being given by the author at Fordham University. According to Gekko, greed is now sanctioned by the government, and the U.S. economy is on the verge of collapse as a direct result of leveraged debt and wild conjecture. When Jake goes behind Winnie's back to try and repair her relationship with her father, Gekko reveals his compelling theories on the likely reasons for Zabel's downfall. Later, as Jake begins plotting to avenge his mentor, Gekko starts to reveal his true colors.