Wall Street (UK)
Click to read:
An Oliver Stone film
Certificate: 15
Running Time: 120 mins
Retail Price: £19.99
Release Date:
Content Type: Movie
Synopsis:
In this riveting behind-the-scenes look at big business in the 1980`s, an ambitious young stockbroker (Charlie Sheen) is lured into the illegal, lucrative world of corporate espionage when he is seduced by the power, status and financial wizardry of Wall Street legend Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas in his Oscar winning performance).
But he soon discovers that the pursuit of overnight riches comes at a price that`s too hight to pay. Daryl Hannah and Martin Sheen co-star in Oliver Stone`s gripping morality tale about the American dream gone wrong.
Special Features:
Interactive Menus
Scene Access
Commentary by Director Oliver Stone
45 minute documentary featuring Oliver Stone, Michael Douglas, Charlie and Martin Sheen
Two Trailers
Video Tracks:
Widescreen Anamorphic 1.85:1
Audio Tracks:
Dolby Digital 5.1 English
Subtitle Tracks:
Hebrew
Icelandic
Polish
Czech
Swedish
Finnish
CC: English
Hungarian
Danish
Norwegian
Directed By:
Oliver Stone
Written By:
Oliver Stone
Stanley Weiser
Starring:
John C. McGinley
Chuck Pfeiffer
Franklin Cover
Tamara Tunie
Charlie Sheen
Casting By:
Billy Hopkins
Risa Bramon Garcia
Soundtrack By:
Stewart Copeland
Music From:
Giuseppe Verdi
Director of Photography:
Robert Richardson
Editor:
Claire Simpson
Costume Designer:
Ellen Mirojnick
Production Designer:
Stephen Hendrickson
Producer:
Edward R. Pressman
A. Kitman Ho
Michael Flynn
Distributor:
Twentieth Century Fox
Your Opinions and Comments
I have to say I was a little disappointed though. It does have a tight script and the performances are certainly above average (Charlie Sheen is possibly under-par in a few scenes), but the archaic tone and the shallow story haven`t aged at all well. It`s an okay movie overall, but it doesn`t really belong on the "classic" pile and If you expect too much then it probably won`t deliver.
The problem for me is that lots of subsequent releases have copied the principal idea and IMO made rather more out of it. These newer films aren`t better written or performed, but because they`re much more current and have the advantage of analysing what DIDN`T work in Stone`s film, they`re infinitely more digestable and credible.
Wall Street`s story lacks depth and an adequate resolution is never provided. I`d been led to believe that it was a kind of moral tale and thought we`d see a big arc of wealth-aquisition/corruption and eventually a big turn-around and all of the consequences. Without spoiling anything, we don`t see this at all and you have to make do with a hasty (slightly implausible) rise to power and a similarly swift (equally implausible) finale. The true after-effects aren`t part of the film and it felt a bit like "Tune in tomorrow for the conclusion" was missing!. Obviously I`m over-stating things a bit, but someone has to redress the balance a touch. Every review I`ve read skims over the flaws and just panders to the genre-classic cliches we always see. It`s a passable flick of course and I wouldn`t argue against that, but it`s the out-moded ideals and wafer-thin story that really stick out in my mind.
The disc is pretty good considering the age of the main feature and the 1.85:1 (anam) picture is very clean. The sound is a re-mastered 5.1 affair and isn`t anything like as effective as most modern surround tracks. I appreciate the effort, but Wall Street is a heavily dialogue-based film and the audio isn`t a primary concern. The extras are a lengthy documentary and a commentary from Stone. Again, considering the age of the movie this is more than generous.
Basically, a surprisingly flat and comparitively uneventful movie. There are some memorable speeches and performances, but the story is uninspiring and the conceptual themes are too familiar and old-fashioned to be interesting today.