Saturday, May 15, 2010, Jamadi ul Awwal 30, 1431 A.H  
   HOME
   News in English
   News in Urdu
   Program Profiles
   GEO TV
   GEO UK
   GEO USA
   GEO ME
   GEO CANADA
   GEO EUROPE
   GEO JAPAN
   GEO SUPER
   AAG TV
   Corporate Profile
   Geo News Tariff
   Geo Ent Tariff
   News Archive
   Contact Us
   FAQ
   Feedback
   GEO SKINS
   GEO RINGTONES
   GEO NewsAlert
   GEO Wallpapers
   Transcripts of Program
   Team GEO
   Exam Results
 
 
 GEO Entertainment
 ‘Wall Street’ a powerfully told sequel
 Updated at: 1021 PST,  Saturday, May 15, 2010
‘Wall Street’ a powerfully told sequel CANNES: Oliver Stone's 1987 film "Wall Street" took viewers into an exotic world. Those were the days when financial news occupied the gray back pages of newspapers.

Suddenly, here was a movie about banking that looked like a thriller -- traders talked a mile a minute, brokers did deals between gulps of coffee, millions of dollars moved in the twinkling of an eye, people talked on cell phones (albeit the size of a brick), and men could change destiny through insider trading. You also learned that, in the by-now iconic phrase uttered by its antihero, Gordon Gekko, "greed is good."

Stone returns to this world in "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps," but there's nothing exotic about it anymore. It's featured on the nightly news in every unemployment statistic and freshly announced corporate downsizing. The bank bailout debate still rages, and arrogant banking kingpins looks less like antiheroes than out-and-out villains.

So Stone and his savvy writers, Allan Loeb and Stephen Schiff, have crafted a tale that takes advantage of viewers' newfound knowledge and cynicism. At its heart is a pair of good young people wanting to put money into green energy while all around them there revolves, like an evil planetary system, gravitational forces that know only unregulated (in every sense of the word) chicanery.

"Money Never Sleeps" is that rare sequel that took its time -- 23 years -- so it not only advances a story but also has something new to say. The film overheats now and then, but blame this on filmmaking passion. One senses a fully engaged filmmaker at the helm, driving the movie at a lightning pace as if in a hurry to get to the next scene or next aphorism that further illuminates this dark world.

How audiences will react to revelations that may no longer be revelations is hard to say. But Stone has cast his movie well with Shia LaBeouf, Josh Brolin and Carey Mulligan to attract younger viewers while Michael Douglas' return as Gekko can't help being a major lure. The 20th Century Fox film, which premiered out of competition at the Cannes festival, opens in the fall.

Wisely, Gekko becomes a subplot. While the opening sequence details his release from prison in 2001, along with some good jokes about that ancient cell phone and the limo that pulls up being for a rapper, not him, the story settles quickly on a young proprietary trader, Jake Moore (LaBeouf), who just happens to be in love with Winnie Gekko (Mulligan), Gordon's estranged daughter.

The focus thus shifts to the pre-2008 bubble, where Jake gets caught off-guard by a meltdown in his own investment banking firm. Its head and his mentor (Frank Langella) takes a huge fall when a governmental bailout never materializes and an old nemesis, Bretton James (Brolin), a partner in a rival bank, pounces on the firm like a vulture smelling carrion.

Jake finds a small way to get revenge for his old boss, which catches James' attention. Rather than settle the score, James offers Jake a job. Which only postpones Jake's determination to avenge his mentor.

Meanwhile, Jake takes in a lecture by Gekko, who is promoting his new book, "Is Greed Good?" Jake approaches the author and offers to help facilitate a rapprochement between father and daughter. Gekko agrees but, as is his nature, plays things cagey.

So a story about the new Wall Street gets entwined with one about Gekko struggling to rehabilitate his image and regain respect in financial circles. Prison hasn't softened Gekko up, but it has perhaps sharpened his moral perceptions.

Looking at the new Wall Street, he remarks, "I was small-time compared to these crooks." His book anticipates the meltdown, but -- shades of the old Gekko -- he wishes he had $100 million to take advantage of it.

Can you win two Oscars playing the same role? An actor rarely gets the opportunity to revive a breakthrough role in a way that allows him to rethink the character in terms of changes time has wrought and to reflect on where fatal flaws once lay. Douglas does this brilliantly.

He does so by carrying on with a character very reminiscent of the original, with the same mannerisms and slicked-back hair, but instead of a defiant, cocky pirate, he is now a man with patience, one willing to wait for the opportunity to strike and to put family first -- if it can be arranged on his terms.

LaBeouf nicely balances his character's idealism with cold-eyed pragmatism. He gets the earnestness but also the steely determination.

Mulligan and Brolin deliver extremely strong supporting roles with attention-grabbing characters that could star in other movies.

Veterans Eli Wallach, Susan Sarandon and, of course, Langella make vivid impressions with their screen time.

Stone gets too fancy here and there. He and his "Alexander" cinematographer, Rodrigo Prieto, swoop the camera around Manhattan as if it were attached to a bird. A heavy reliance on multiple screens, graphics and digital tricks makes it feel like you're watching CNN with all its computer-screen busy-ness.

This often distracts from what the characters are saying. With most movies, this may not be a bad idea, but the dialogue here is so forceful you want to savor every zinger.
Back     |    Send this story to friend    
 
Share this story!    ShareThis
 
» GEO Pakistan
Qureshi for strengthening Pak-Kuwait ties
Pak to continue efforts for terror elimination: Rehman
Gilani rules out clash between state organs
President hailed for accepting harsh criticism
Babar Awan says ‘will appear before SC on May 25’
   
» GEO World
5.1 magnitude quake hits southern Iran
Obama blasts oil companies over growing spill
Small earthquake shakes Southern California
Hague hails strong bond with US
S.Korea, Japan, China to hold N.Korea discussions
   
» GEO Business
Bullion prices on Friday
Lackluster trade activity at KSE amid low volume
Gold hits record high in international markets
Dar seeks delay in VAT imposition
Oil falls below $74 in Asia
   
» GEO Sports
McGlashan sets up New Zealand-Australia final
Australia into World Twenty20 final
Akmal Brothers set Australia huge target of 192
Australia win toss and field against Pakistan
Rain delays Australia-Pakistan semi-final toss
   
» Geo Entertainment
‘Wall Street’ a powerfully told sequel
Van Damme, Lundgren reteam for 'Soldier IV'
Katrina launches Rhymeskool with A.R. Rahman
‘The Hurt Locker’ producers to file lawsuit against piracy
Katrina peeved over the name of her latest flick
   
» GEO Health
Overtime linked to heart risk: study
Research finds new genes that play role in Alzheimer's
Off-the-shelf genetics tests to hit US pharmacies
Tokyo's samurai women punish fat with sword workout
Olive oil, chewing gum and green tea prevent plaque build-up
   
» GEO Amazing and Insteresting
Australian girl sailor crosses round-the-world finish line
In Italy, divorce is in the air
One in four US homes has mobile phone, no landline
Sharp develops 3D camera system for mobile phones
Abu Dhabi hotel ATM dispenses gold bars
   
 
Copyright © GEO TV. All rights reserved.