Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Blu-ray)

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Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
Following a long prison term for insider trading, Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) finds himself on the outside looking in at a world he once commanded. Ostensibly hoping to repair his broken relationship with his daughter, Gekko forges an alliance with her fiance, Jake (Shia LaBeouf). Although Jake comes to view Gordon as a father figure, he learns the hard way that Gekko is still a master manipulator who will stop at nothing to achieve his goals.

Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.1 x 5.42 x 0.58 inches; 2.88 ounces
Media Format ‏ : ‎ Blu-ray, Color
Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ English, Portuguese, Spanish
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00KC4R8KO
Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 2
Best Sellers Rank: #120,233 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV) #35,623 in Blu-ray
Customer Reviews: 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 2,381 ratings var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });

11 reviews for Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Blu-ray)

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  1. David R. Allen

    “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” (2010) is a great movie in surprising ways, not obvious, but worth thinking about!
    “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps” (2010) is a great movie in surprising ways, not obvious, but worth thinking about!First, it’s different than the excellent and deservedly praised and honored “Wall Street” (1987) movie starring Charlie Sheen and Michael Douglas.”Wall Street II” is good for different reasons. Don’t compare apples to oranges! Different, both good, but not for the same reasons.”Wall Street II” is worth watching (again and again) for several reasons:1. Great acting by superstar actors like Michael Douglas and Charlie Sheen (not credited, but part of the movie for about 60 seconds….the best 60 seconds in the movie!).The “accidental meeting at a party” of 1987 “Wall Street” stars Michael Douglas and Charlie Sheen is electric. These two guys are dynamite, and when mixed, produce incredible dramatics not seen in the rest of the movie, or in most other movies, anywhere.Two superstars, no other way to describe them.The movie is worth watching just for the quick take sequence which includes the return of “Bud Fox” (Charlie Sheen) meeting up with “Gordon Gekko” (Michael Douglas), both recently out of prison for “insider information victimless crime” offenses, and both doing great!You’ll go a long way to see better, more dynamic superstar actor work than these two guys provide in this movie.It’s explosive, and it’s precious. Anyone who cares for incredible acting MUST see the Gekko and Fox Meetup part of the “Wall Street II.”2. Michael Douglas is an incredible actor of high gifts. He deserved his Best Actor Academy Award from “Wall Street I” (1987) and this movie (“Wall Street II”) shows that with good writing and the right story, he can do the same good work, again and again and again.It is a pleasure and a privilege to see the great Michael Douglas act in “Wall Street II.” His Dad, Kirk Douglas (aka “Isadore Dempsky”) would be proud of son Mike.His weight in the movie is bad, and director Oliver Stone wisely shoots around the newly enlarged (too big) waistline Mike has in “Wall Street II.”But…what the hell? Nobody’s perfect.Other “nobody’s perfect” fat movie stars in the movie include Sylvia Miles (see her before she gained weight in “Midnight Cowboy” [1969], and Susan Sarandon, who plays the mother of the young man star of the movie with a the strange name “Shia LeBoeuf” or something like that.The commentary (available on the DVD versions of this movie) of Oliver Stone is wonderful.Stone went to two famous prep schools (Trinity School in Manhattan, and the Hill School) and then went to Yale U. Then to NYC Film School.He is an educated, cultured man, and his commentary is filled with references to Greek mythical figures like Tiresias and others one learns only when one goes to the best-of-the-best classical eastern USA private schools….which Oliver Stone did!The DVD commentaries part of “Wall Street II” are a pleasure to listen to, and that is also true of other commentaries Oliver Stone provides for other DVD’s I’ve seen and heard done by him, especially including his “W” movie.He’s smart, interesting, and his company is for sale in these DVD commentaries, and he’s worth inviting to dinner!Make sure the dinner you provide has gourmet tasty food and a beautiful, intriguing, promising female dinner partner for your guest, Oliver Stone.Great company from a smart, interesting, intelligent, and gracious man.Get this “feel good” movie and keep it close.You won’t regret it!————-Written by Tex (David) Allen.

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  2. T. Lord

    Love, Life, Family and the Wall Street Collapse of 2008
    I’ve worked on Wall Street my whole life. The first film was cut throat Ivan Boseky insider trading and raw greed at its finest. Michael Douglas was simply riveting. I had been waiting for the sequel ever since announced. Going opening day, I was stunned after watching it the first time. Yes, Oliver Stone nails the Collapse of Wall Street in 2008 with the mortgage meltdown. Every character can be parlayed into a real life individual involved in the Bear Stearns and Lehman collapse. But the real story is about second chances in life, fighting for family, doing the right thing, commitment to work and the price paid for loyalty. Shia Labeouf (Jake Moore) is at his best when he sets out on a course of vindictive revenge after James Brolin (Bretton James) causes the “perceived” collapse of Keller Zabel(KZI) and the suicide of his mentor and KZI’s leader Lou Zabel.Michael Douglas (Gordon Gekko) and Shia Labeouf team up given that Jake is engaged to Gordon’s daughter Winnie. They embark on path to understand KZI’s collapse and to seek revenge, plus make a few dollars along the way for Gordon. Gordon and Jake make a series of “trades” to learn that Bretton James and his firm, Churchill Schwartz, were illegally betting on everything under the Sun to destroy KZI. Oliver Stone’s attention to detail is STUNNING. Words won’t do justice to the perfection of the each set. You have to know Wall Street to know that on a scale of 1 to 100, he gets a 99 because no one gets a 100. Gordon’s real redemption is his name, reputation and a deep love for his family. Jake simply wants to do right by the death of Lou Zabel and persecute those respondsible. Wrap those emotions around a fast paced collapse of Wall Street, and you have a beautiful movie. Vetrans of investing will be amazed, but the film has a broad reach. One can’t spoil the detail in the screen writer’s brillance, but the lines are wit personified. To be “blamed for all disasters since Nintendo” speaks to taunt tone and wit. Best line of all is Gordon’s—“When you stop telling lies about me, I’ll stop telling the truth about you.” Gordon finally does do right. One shouldn’t spoil this film. I titled my review “Love, Life Family….” The last 20 minutes bring together all aspects of any excellent drama. On a personal note given Michael Douglas’ condition, I will remember his 2 performances in Wall Stret with deep gratitude and always wish him good health. “Time is the most important thing in life.” Well said Mr. Douglas

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  3. alicia

    Great movie
    Great movie. Works well

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  4. zzrose

    Michael Douglas was just superb
    My favorite movie of all time is Wall Street. This follow up, though really good, just doesn’t quite hit that level. Now, that might not be fair to judge it in that light, but it’s obviously a follow up to Wall Street so you sort of have to do that in deciding if you like it or not. Having said that, I liked it not only as a sequel but also just as a stand along good story. Though not necessary to see Wall Street, it certainly would help if you did simply because I don’t think you’d get the point of what’s going on as well if you didn’t.I really did not like the music score. I understand it’s supposed to be more ‘hip’, but I just did not care for it. To me, the score just didn’t mesh with the tone of what the movie was trying to accomplish.Also, some of the acting was just a little forced, though Michael Douglas was just superb in making the transition from the vibrant Gorden Gekko in Wall Street to a more subdued character here. Still filled with cunning and greed, he just played his part right for what was needed.Though not anywhere near the number of worthy lines to quote verbatim, Gekko did have some good ones to remember! All in all, Money Never Sleeps was entertaining, and had no dead spots. The main plot was good, and it certainly keeps your attention if you’re into this type of movie.

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  5. Randall S. Counts

    Just as good as original Wall Street
    Great movie regardless of what people online say

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  6. Eduardo

    Excelente pelicula
    Gran pelicula y se agradece la copia digital

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  7. Uday Prakash

    Fun to watch…

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  8. Mr. Jonathan R. Pascall

    This is better than the original but should point out that I have now watched this film around 6 times, and the first 2 times (and being a huge fan of the first film) I watched it I found it disappointing. I found it confusing, too fast paced, and lacking the bite and empathy of the first film.However, once watched again I started to understand more of what was going on and more of what Oliver Stone was trying to get across (and I’m no stranger to the financial markets). Perhaps the problem was the Stone had too much to say.So, if you’re a die hard fan and prepared to buy this DVD and watch it a few times I think you’ll really enjoy it, otherwise it may be a disappointment.

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  9. Jean-Sebatien Leveille

    Exellent perfomance de jeux d’acteurs !

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  10. ガンバルジャン

    以前に、TVで見たことがあったが、また見たくなったので、DVDを購入しました。主人公のゲッコーのような羽振りのよいトレーダーにはあこがれる。

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  11. HistoryTechDoc

    Current themes reflect the arguably unnecessary collapse of Lehman Brothers and the huge U.S. Tarp Bailout. Oliver Stone’s portrayal of the board room politics behind the 2008 Financial Crisis seem plausible. Background soundtrack unfortunately overran the film’s speech dialog at the cinema where I viewed this film; this may have been the cinema’s fault and will have to wait for the DVD to determine guilty party.Substantial number of technical finance terms that may leave the unannointed nonplussed. For those more interested in Stone’s insight into Wall Wall Street’s lack of ethics, the first half of the film would be more interesting. The film’s second half centered mostly around the rehabilitated life of Gordon Gekko and his estranged relationship with his daughter and future son-in-law.Wished the film had been at least 10 minutes longer to wrap up some of the earlier financial intrigues or less daughter involvement.Like Wall Street I, viewers will need to either return for a second viewing to get a better grasp of the first half’s details or wait to purchase the forthcoming DVD.Gordon Gekko’s university speech was Mike Douglas at his best. 5 Stars for the first half and 3 Stars for the second half, make for an overall 4 Star rating and worth the price of admission.

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    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Blu-ray)
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Blu-ray)

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