Video Review: Wall Street – Money Never Sleeps


Over the weekend I finally got around to watching Wall Street – Money Never Sleeps, the sequel to Wall Street. The latter is widely considered a classic. I’m confident the sequel won’t be viewed in the same light 20 years from now, unfortunately. I’m not saying it’s a bad film in general terms. It just doesn’t live up to the original and lacks some creativity.

The thing I came away from Money Never Sleeps thinking was that it lacked the edge of the original. Shia Labeouf does not have anywhere near the same kind of screen presence as Charlie Sheen did (Bud Fox makes a brief appearance in the sequel, by the way), leaving the direct inter-personal conflicts which feature in the story – verbal as they may be – less impactful. And the lack of one strong antagonist character (Michael Douglas’s Gordon Gekko sometimes is one, sometimes isn’t) tends to diffuse the tension.

In terms of the story, if you’ve read much about the history of the financial crisis – especially On the Brink, by Hank Paulson – you will see a very strong similarity in the early parts of Money Never Sleeps. There’s also a firm that is portrayed very much in the way Goldman Sachs was portrayed in recent years. To top it all off, Gekko has very John Paulson-like success in the markets.

I do think the new film does a pretty good job reflecting how information moves around these days. Blogs, instant messaging, and the like feature along side the traditional phone and in-person interaction. Overall, though, I’d give it a middling rating. Gekko’s semi-reformed character is the only one that’s really interesting and the story is flat and somewhat disjointed.

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About the Author
John Forman, author of this blog, has traded for more than 20 years, is a professional market analyst, and authored The Essentials of Trading. He is an active participant in trading forums, consults for trading related businesses, as published literally dozens of trading articles, and has been quoted in a number of books and in the media.
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  • http://leduc.blogetery.com/ duc

    John,

    Haven’t seen the film, but Oliver Stone seems to have lost the edge that he once had. Take some of his latest efforts, the George Bush effort, pathetic.

    I’m on a new blog address after the old blog got nuked by China.

    jog on
    duc

    • http://www.theessentialsoftrading.com John

      He actually did a couple of scenes in the film himself in this one.

  • http://www.eldercharts.com Mark

    My thoughts are similar towards the ‘sequel’. Perhaps it was because there was no clear villain, no character that captured the dark side, whose life we curiously peered into, as much as Gordon Gekko captured in the first. I didn’t hate Josh Brolin’s character, but I didn’t love Frank Langella’s character either. Overall, it felt lacking and really failed to excite, and left me disappointed.

    Or perhaps it was because I was somewhat desensitized to wall street drama after seeing it unfold for months on the news…

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