Regie: Oliver Stone
Buch: Alan Loeb
Starring: Michael Douglas, Shia LaBeouf, Carey Mulligan, Susan Sarandon, Eli Wallach
WALL STREET, Oliver Stone's critical assessment of the stock market in 1987 is, rightly well as one of the great classics of film history - everything fits in perfectly! As so often holds true: a successful work should be allowed to rest in peace at best, especially when such a catastrophic nonsense like WALL STREET 2 - THE MONEY NEVER SLEEPS is mortised.
Wall Street - Rest in Peace
Why is it that Oliver Stone's latest film has gone completely in the shorts? First you have the director of the slope to absolute superficiality attest. It starts with the fact that you actually a metaphor for the collapse of the stock market by the uninspired image of a bursting bubble. In this film, the Internet is still depicted with colorful tunnels and glowing letters, which are reflected on the Faces, the people. In general, the entire stock market looks like it had sprung from the 1995s movies HACKERS - There is a lack of credibility on the one hand, on the other side feels the wooden symbols kidding plain and simple. Oliver Stone sets date by his action tinkering around the banking crisis, but this seems so designed and wooden, it's that, as an audience just do not feel taken seriously. MONEY NEVER SLEEPS suffers from a significant symbolism of allowing a subtle style can be no question anymore. What was the original nor a critical look behind the facades of the stock market, here gives way to a listless rolled down soap opera without structure and tension. Shia LaBeauf [TRANSFORMERS 1-28] gives the terribly unpleasant and stupid young brokers and is visibly overwhelmed, while Josh Brolin [NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN] in the role of instant villain is probably the one-dimensional performance of his career.
A point goes to the soundtrack
The film is a long playing time of over langweillig two hours just terrible, which is due to the confused and often trivial story of revenge and relationships because hilt not a pretentious or forced upon the motorcycle race short guest appearance by Charlie Sheen. The only thing worth seeing [or worth listening to] the great soundtrack by Brian Eno and Talking Heads frontman David Byrne. Only a little message at the end: Dear Oliver Stone, after such terrible films such as Alexander, WORLD TRADE CENTER and now WALL STREET 2 - THE MONEY NEVER SLEEPS, it would be finally time to retire. Please do us this favor.
1 / 10 stock market crash
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