How much do I owe you again?
Wall Street's real truths: Shia LaBeouf's bare chest & other "revelations" fromNo. 1 movie
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010) puts moviegoers on their haunches and tells them to beg. Greed isn't good, it's great.
Leaving this film, one begins to conspire his/her next big, kill-guaranteed trade. A recent early evening show at the Edwards Greenway Grand Place Plaza was packed with fathers and sons, mothers and daughters — all kinds in a booming theater. Makes you think of Bernie Madoff. Makes you regret buying a home on a mortgage. Makes you wish you were Michael Douglas.
Douglas returns to play the 1980s' super villain Gordon Gekko in a new time. Douglas' Gekko (the actor filmed through stage 4 throat cancer) almost seems to channel William Dafoe's Green Goblin with his dry, wry and still quick verbal jabs.
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps is different from the 1987 original in that, it doesn't rely as heavily on sex or high-life shenanigans. Maybe that's because today, we can't afford to be without our morals.
This sequel granted me my first look at Shia LaBeouf's bare chest, and yet I still don't know if I should be thanking anyone. I will say this time around, director Oliver Stone leaves us with even more golden nugget phrases than he did in the first.
Favorites include: "A fisherman always sees another fisherman from afar," "Parents are the bone children sharpen their teeth on," and especially, "Are we going under? Who isn't?"
The original Wall Street was dedicated to Stone's late father Louis Stone (a former successful broker on Wall Street), whose nod in this film appears in the character Louis Zabel (LaBeouf's father-figure played by Frank Langella). The focus on fraternal relationships is what gives air to this balloon. The new version wrangles in a father-daughter relationship that anchors the movie out of its overly edited, sometimes boring plot. If Stone doesn't leave an imprint on your wallet, he'll definitely leave a mark on your heart.
We’ve been duped — plain and simple. Sunday, I spent $45.93 on groceries at Whole Foods. Why? I don’t know. I certainly couldn’t afford it. My roommate wised up and waited until we got to H-E-B afterwards to buy four times as many groceries for the same price.
As Americans, we love feeling the danger of debt and poverty. With a 9.6 percent unemployment rate, money at the movies and specifically the greed in the financial system is good for the box office, because it deals with a subject most Americans relate to easily.
It's no surprise that Wall Street is the No. 1 movie in America. Stone provides an easy hook for an eager audience. There's no need to fake any outrage.