Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Brand new Wall Street film is really a splash

The new “Wall Street” film has been drooled over for months. It has been a big topic for months. Fans of the first are waiting within the wings for “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps”. The very first movie was launched, and partly inspired by, the stock exchange crash in the 1980s. Douglas is back as Gordon Gekko in the sequel, which takes place in the midst of the real estate crash of 2008. Both films address unchecked greed and immoral trading in the realm of investment and high finance after scandal.

’Wall Street’ part Deux

The sequel to the original film takes place within the urgent wake of the housing crash of 2008. The presumption is that Gordon Gekko, the role Michael Douglas plays, went to jail after the first film ended, as the second film opens with his release from prison. It is a legendary role. It won Douglas an Oscar, and legions of fans. Gekko starts giving lectures to students, and then decides to help his daughter’s fiancé, played by Shia LeBeouf, to bring down a corrupt hedge fund manager. It is partly a story of sabotage of the wicked. However, the film, nicknamed but not really titled “Wall Street 2,” is also a story of redemption.

Wall Street within the real world

People that work on Wall Street are aware that it is just a movie. A post within the Wall Street Journal by Martin Fridson opines the movie captured popular outrage, however that it ignores actual causes of the 2008 crash. On the ABC site, a corporate lawyer who works on Wall Street also opined that the film is great entertainment, however little more than that. Hollywood takes license with historical events, which isn’t exactly a secret. Numerous events in history, which were really really complex, were bent for the sake of sensation. Oliver Stone is no stranger to this kind of criticism, and Wall Street heavyweights which were technical advisors lamented his liberal use of license over portraying the complexities of real life.

Barrel spoiled

There is some truth within the cliché that a bad apple ruins a lot. It is kind of a shame. Numerous on Wall Street work incredibly ethically and unbelievably hard. If “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” was about those sort of individuals, it wouldn’t sell numerous tickets.

More on this topic

ABC News

abcnews.go.com/Business/films-taking-wall-street/story?id=11712654 and page=3

Wall Street Journal

blogs.wsj.com/marketbeat/2010/09/24/a-wall-street-veteran-on-wall-street-2/



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