Genre: Drama/Crime
Director: Oliver Stone
Cast: Michael Douglas, Shia LaBeouf, Josh
Brolin, Carey Mulligan, Susan Sarandon, Frank Langella, Vanessa
Ferlito, Charlie Sheen
RunTime: 2 hrs 14 mins
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.wallstreetmoneyneversleeps.com/
Opening Day: 23 September 2010
Synopsis:
Michael
Douglas is back in his Oscar(r)-winning role as one of the
screen’s most
notorious villains, Gordon Gekko. Emerging from a lengthy
prison stint, Gekko finds
himself on the outside of a world he once dominated. Looking
to repair his damaged
relationship with his daughter Winnie (Carey Mulligan), Gekko
forms an alliance with her fiancé Jacob (Shia LaBeouf).
But can Jacob and Winnie really trust the
ex-financial titan, whose relentless efforts to redefine himself
in a different era
have unexpected consequences.
Movie Review:
Twenty-three years ago, Oliver Stone’s Wall Street (1987)
came out at a time when the world was reeling from the shock
of an economic crisis defined by Black Monday, the day of
19 October 1987 when the global stock market suffered the
largest one-day percentage decline. Stone’s movie introduced
audiences to a world that was largely alien to many-, a world
hidden inside the Ivory Towers of our financial institutions-
and more significantly, to the people behind these institutions
whom his lead character Gordon Gecko represented.
"Greed is good!" said Gordon, a by-now iconic line
that no doubt inadvertently served as inspiration for stock
traders since then. And apparently, that greed has been left
unchecked for the past 23 years- where Gordon himself aptly
observes- it has since become legal. Like its predecessor,
"Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" comes at a time
when the world is still reeling from the shock of an economic
crisis, one that has since been dubbed the worst economic
crisis since the Great Depression. So despite coming more
than two decades after Michael Douglas career-defining (read:
Academy Award) performance, there’s really no question
whether or not this sequel is still relevant.
It is, and very much so in fact, as Stone’s savvy writers
Allan Loeb and Stephen Schiff have skilfully adapted the real-life
fates of Bear Sterns and JP Morgan into Keller Zabel Investments
(KWI) and Churchill Schwartz respectively for the film. KWI
is where young hotshot Jake Moore works at- one of its lion
head founders Louis Zabel (Frank Langella) like a father figure
to him. But the crisis takes its toll on KWI and as its stock
price plunges, the bank finds itself in backroom meetings
with the Federal Reserve Board, mirroring the fate of Bear
Sterns right down to the paltry single-digit share price negotiated
by the government for JP Morgan.
Zabel succumbs to the pressure and commits suicide, leading
Jake to set his sights on Schwartz’s head honcho Bretton
James (Josh Brolin), the arrogant manipulator responsible
for proposing the ludicrous buyout package to Zabel. Jake
gains Bretton’s trust by displaying his financial acumen,
and a large part of the subsequent cat-and-mouse game depends
on your understanding of certain inherently complex economic
concepts like sub-prime mortgage-backed securities and credit
default swaps. Through graphs on the New York skyline, split-screens
and TV news clips, Stone tries his best to explain these concepts
to his audience- though despite his efforts, unless you’re
a finance major, you’re unlikely to comprehend all the
intricacies.
Still, you’re likely to grasp more than enough to gasp
at the absurdities behind the financial apocalypse- the power-players
behind the banks whose greed precipitated the crisis in the
first place, the brokering with the Federal Reserve for more
liquidity in order to keep them afloat (we’re too big
to fail they say) and the sheer ignorance of their own level
of exposure. Stone does not disguise his own leanings on the
subject (even appearing in a brief cameo) but he knows better
than to preach to his audience or get in the way of what already
is compelling by virtue of its authenticity.
This sequel is also richer for expanding on the representations
in the earlier film. Bretton is the new Gekko, the new breed
of smarmy Wall Street sharks whose unbridled greed for money
thrives in shades of grey and 'moral hazards'. Gekko on the
other hand has become somewhat of a mentor for Jake, the Charlie
Sheen-Bud Fox equivalent in this sequel. His ambition no means
diminished, Gekko is the older generation whose instincts
are sharper and shrewder- his observations on the current
state of the financial crisis accurate and critical ("You’re
all pretty much fucked," he tells a room full of financial
players. "You’re the Ninja generation. No income,
no jobs, no assets."). And Jake is the proverbial hotshot
hoping to make his name, the finance majors who go from the
classrooms of the Ivy League colleges into the offices of
the big names on Wall Street.
Against this backdrop, Stone weaves in a strong family story.
Jake’s fiancé, Winnie (Carey Mulligan) estranged
from her father, Gekko, blames him for the death of her brother.
While Jake tries to patch relations between Winnie and Gekko,
he has intentions of his own seeking advice from Gekko behind
Winnie’s back. Each of these characters and their motivations
are nicely fleshed out, and the twists and turns of their
fates are food for thought of the often polarising choices
between family and money and its concomitant consequences.
Stone also has a great cast assembled for the film. With a
grayer head of hair, Michael Douglas returns in excellent
form as Gordon Gekko, bringing a fresh sensibility to his
role brought on by the years of experience. Shia LaBeouf acquits
himself admirably in a dramatic role that doesn’t require
him to get jumpy the way he usually acts (see Transformers
and Indiana Jones). Carey Mulligan is heartbreakingly good
as the moral centre of the film. Brolin- fresh off Stone’s
last film W.- more than fills the shoes as the villain-equivalent
Gordon here. Other veterans like Susan Sarandon as Jake’s
mother and Eli Wallach as Schwartz’s patriarch steal
the brief scenes they are in.
But the greatest praise should be reserved for Oliver Stone,
whose return to Wall Street finds him at his most assured
and confident for many years. He directs with the proceedings
with brio and verve, accompanied by an appropriately retro
soundtrack by David Bryne and Brian Eno, as well as Rodrigo
Prieto’s luscious cinematography. Just as admirable
was his patience at holding back this sequel until 23 years
later, a wait that has proved astute in providing the film
with a keen sense of relevance. Not only is it relevant, it
is also important as a cautionary tale- even more so if one
ponders the stronghold our financial institutions have over
all our businesses and activities today, including the very
financing of this film.
Movie Rating:
(Stone returns to reflect on the nature of greed in
Wall Street 23 years after inadvertently glamorising it -
and it is a lesson as relevant as it is important, this sequel
a fine drama through and through)
Review by Gabriel Chong
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