Movie Description Oliver Stone opened fire on the greed decade of the 1980s with this morality tale set on Wall Street. It stars Charlie Sheen as Bud Fox, an ambitious rookie stockbroker from a blue-collar background who is mesmerized by Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas), a Mephistophelean superbroker who specializes in corporate takeovers. Despite his initial resistance to Bud's entreaties, Gekko finally takes on the eager beaver as his protégé, schooling him in the kind of slash-and-burn maneuvers that have taken Gekko to the top. This style is far more attractive to Fox than the more prosaic but principled approach to investing preached by veteran Lou Mannheim (Hal Holbrook). And, at first, it's impossible to dispute his preference; as Bud's life moves into the fast lane, he quickly acquires an upscale apartment and a girlfriend to match, interior designer Darien (Darryl Hannah). But when Gekko demands that Bud not only break the law but directly undermine his union-leader father, Carl (Martin Sheen), and jeopardize the jobs and lives of his friends and family, he realizes that the cost of success might be more than he's willing to pay. WALL STREET is a riveting, testosterone-fueled tour of the Street's upper echelons, featuring standout performances by Michael Douglas and Martin Sheen.
| Credits | | Producer: | Edward R. Pressman | | Cast: | Daryl Hannah, Hal Holbrook, James Karen, John C. McGinley, Sean Young, Terence Stamp |
| Details | | Sound: | HiFi Sound, Stereo Sound |
Notes The film began shooting April 24, 1987; completed shooting July 4, 1987. Released in the USA December 11, 1987. Shown at the Berlin Film Festival February 1988. Released on video July 7, 1988.
Filmed in New York City and Utah.
Estimated budget: $16 million.
Stone dedicated the film to his stockbroker father.
Shown at the Greater Fort Lauderdale Film Festival in a tribute to Edward Pressman.
For maximum authenticity, director Oliver Stone made sure that Michael Douglas and Charlie Sheen spent time with numerous brokers and arbitrage experts who were hired as consultants. Sheen also met with a former Wall Street employee who had pleaded guilty to insider trading.
Editorial Reviews "...Douglas puts his character's ideas across with such seductive self-assurance that conservatives could easily ignore the irony..." Entertainment Weekly - pp.68-9 - Glenn Kenny (05/17/1996)
"...[WALL STREET] is as good a contemporary story as there is today..." Variety - Brit. (12/09/1987)
"...It's a wizardly turn by Douglas..." Los Angeles Times - Sheila Benson (12/11/1987)
"...A richly cast sex-and-power melodrama..." USA Today - Mike Clark (11/17/2000)
"[T]he 'greed is good' speech that Gekko delivers before an audience of corporate stockholders is a show-stopper." Premiere - Premiere Staff (04/01/2004)
4 stars out of 5 -- "[T]he film remains relevant and gripping....The script is endlessly quotable..." Ultimate DVD - David Richardson (05/01/2008)
Awards 1987Academy AwardsBest ActorMichael Douglas
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