- There really is a lot to like about Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps but ultimately, like the trader's they're chronicling, the filmmakers are unable to resist the impulse to have their cake and eat it too.
- Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010) Now out of prison but still disgraced by his peers, Gordon Gekko works his future son-in-law, an idealistic stock broker, when he sees an opportunity to take down a Wall Street enemy and rebuild his empire.
- For more info on 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' visit: http://www.hollywood.com.
- Now, before we get into the fundamentals of how you can watch 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' right now, here are some details about the Dune, Edward R. Pressman Film Corp.
- Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010) Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps: As the global economy teeters on the brink of disaster, a young Wall Street trader partners with disgraced former Wall Street corporate raider Gordon Gekko on a two-tiered mission: To alert the financial community to the coming doom, and to find out who was responsible for the death of the young trader's mentor.
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Wall Street Money Never Sleeps 2010 Watch Online
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps is Oliver Stone's sequel to his 1987 film Wall Street. I quite enjoyed the original, and I thought it was a surprising effort from Oliver Stone.
Looking to watch 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' on your TV or mobile device at home? Tracking down a streaming service to buy, rent, download, or watch the Oliver Stone-directed movie via subscription can be difficult, so we here at Moviefone want to do the heavy lifting.
Read on for a listing of streaming and cable services - including rental, purchase, and subscription options - along with the availability of 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' on each platform. Now, before we get into the fundamentals of how you can watch 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' right now, here are some specifics about the Dune, Edward R. Pressman Film Corp. drama flick.
Released September 24th, 2010, 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' stars Michael Douglas, Shia LaBeouf, Josh Brolin, Carey Mulligan The PG-13 movie has a runtime of about 2 hr 10 min, and received a score of 59 (out of 100) on Metacritic, which compiled reviews from 39 well-known critics.
Interested in knowing what the movie's about? Here's the plot: '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.'
'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' is currently available to rent, purchase, or stream via subscription on Amazon.com, XFINITY, iTunes Store, VUDU, and YouTube .
Read on for a listing of streaming and cable services - including rental, purchase, and subscription options - along with the availability of 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' on each platform. Now, before we get into the fundamentals of how you can watch 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' right now, here are some specifics about the Dune, Edward R. Pressman Film Corp. drama flick.
Released September 24th, 2010, 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' stars Michael Douglas, Shia LaBeouf, Josh Brolin, Carey Mulligan The PG-13 movie has a runtime of about 2 hr 10 min, and received a score of 59 (out of 100) on Metacritic, which compiled reviews from 39 well-known critics.
Interested in knowing what the movie's about? Here's the plot: '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.'
'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' is currently available to rent, purchase, or stream via subscription on Amazon.com, XFINITY, iTunes Store, VUDU, and YouTube .
Wall Street Money Never Sleeps 2010
- The old Gordon Gekko would have torn this movie apart with his gleaming teeth, while todays Gekko seems content just to nibble on the edges.
- This is a pulp novelisation of the banking crisis and its pleas for relevance ring hollow.
- There are times when iconic characters should be left alone to bask in the glory of a single appearance and, unfortunately, that's the case with Gordon Gekko.
- Great to see Douglas back in the role that won him an Oscar. But even when he's offscreen, he's a bigger presence than LaBeouf.
- Stone used to know in his gut that a sermon belongs in the pulpit, not the multiplex. No more.
- Stone handles the financial stuff quite well.
- Christian Science Monitor9/24/2010 by Peter RainerMoney Never Sleeps doesn't get inside the sociopathology of the money culture. In a sense, it is a product, an expression, of that culture. Maybe that's why it's so disagreeably agreeable.
- [A]gainst all probability, 'Money Never Sleeps' is a watchable enough movie for its first hour or so.... But as the financial bubble pops, so too does the cinematic one.
- The story of Jake, Winnie and Gordon makes us wonder if there is any other bedtime story so lulling, so disarming, as moviedom's falsely wrought 'happily ever after.'
- In a perverse but amusing way, Money Never Sleeps sometimes seems like film noir for CNBC junkies.
- Some welcome skulduggery ensues, but the movie's ultimate agenda of rehabilitating a classic bad guy is a big disappointment.
- ... it's Douglas who makes Stone's sequel worth a watch ...
- Saddled with this hollow script, Stone pads with elaborate set pieces.
- Dallas Morning News9/24/2010 by Christopher KellySubtlety has never been Stone's strong suit, but few filmmakers pick at our rawest societal scabs with quite as much brio and determination.
- This movie is by turns brilliant and dumb, naive and wise, nowhere near good enough and something close to great.
- St. Louis Post-Dispatch9/24/2010 by Joe WilliamsIt's a wholly successful sequel -- audacious, entertaining and bracingly pertinent.
- Stone and the script shortchange the characters, forcing them to do things that seem phony and having them recite lines that sound stilted and overly didactic.
- I liked Gordon Gekko better before he turned into Paul Krugman, but in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps he is still at his core a seductive high priest of the money-changers' temples.
- Stone has a knack for pacing, detail and atmosphere that manages to feel authentic and fancifully allegorical at the same time.
- The story certainly holds your attention, but it's a dramatic bubble about a financial bubble.