Sunday, September 26, 2010

Oliver Stone's Wall Street, Money Never Sleeps

Wall Street, Money Never Sleeps is worth seeing. Gordon Gekko, the arch villain of the original 1987 film, is released from a lengthy prison sentence to start life anew. In the intervening years, his daughter, Winnie, has grown up. Proclaiming abhorrence of all things Wall Street, Winnie has nonetheless fallen in love with a young man named Jacob Moore who is, surprise, a Wall Street trader. Jacob, played by Shia LaBoeuf, represents 'the good'. He isn't in the money game for money alone. Instead, his objective is to raise funds to support development of a technology he believes really will be a game changer in the alternative energy field. He avenges injuries inflicted on his beloved mentor, Lewis Zabel, by hedge fund manager Bretton James. Zabel, played by Frank Langella, committs suicide as a consequence of James's exposure of extensive bad debt held by Zabel's firm. On top of all that, prince Jacob makes best efforts to effect a reconciliation between Gekko and his daughter.

This movie is Shakespearean. Power plays, meetings in oak paneled rooms, accusations and miscommunications, deceptions and betrayals abound. Lewis Zabel's ghost even appears to prince Jacob after Zabel's suicide. Hamlet? As the senior member of the Federal Reserve, Eli Wallach's character functions as the fool. Wallach's ancient of Wall Street appears to be completely batty, yet it is he who anoints or condemns. In this film's world, the wheel of fortune spins rapidly, with money replacing dominion as the crux for conflict.

Shia LaBoeuf was perfect as the young prince. The actor convincingly portrayed innocence, conviction, love and passion. Gordon Gekko is Michael Douglas' character. No one else could ever assume that role. Douglas looked rugged and aged. One imagines that Douglas skipped months of botox treatments. Josh Brolin conveyed perfect evil and duplicity through the vehicle of Bretton James. Susan Sarandon portrayed the quintessential Long Islander as Jacob's mother. Loved seeing Sylvia Miles reappear as a realtor selling Jacob's apartment. They both afforded comic relief. I was not enthralled by Carey Mulligan's performance. Constant resort to tears detracted from her character's depth. Also, the audience never sees real anger, even though Winnie professes to be furious with her father. This was surprising, considering all of the other attention to detail in this film. There is one other plot flaw. Gekko's actions at the end of the film, and I will not be a spoiler, seem inconsistent with his personality. Go and judge for yourself.

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