
As the global economy teeters on the brink of disaster, a young Wall Street trader partners with disgraced former Wall Street corporate raider Gordon Gekko on a two-tiered mission: To alert the financial community to the coming doom, and to find out who was responsible for the death of the young trader's mentor.... (Full plot summary below)
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As the global economy teeters on the brink of disaster, a young Wall Street trader partners with disgraced former Wall Street corporate raider Gordon Gekko on a two-tiered mission: To alert the financial community to the coming doom, and to find out who was responsible for the death of the young trader's mentor.
Leave your thoughts about Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.
| New York Daily NewsJoe NeumaierAmong an excellent cast, Douglas truly is the nexus; he and Stone make this sequel pay off big-time. |
| Salon.comAndrew O'HehirIt's an ambitious, uneven, surprisingly talky melodrama. |
| AMCtv.comEugene NovikovThe only thing worse than a movie that resorts to painful cliches is one that resorts to painful cliches that are also wildly inappropriate. |
| St. Louis Post-DispatchJoe WilliamsIt's a wholly successful sequel - audacious, entertaining and bracingly pertinent. |
| The VineBen GookA competent drama with topical themes and a repeat performance for one of Hollywood's most memorable characters of recent times. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps becomes Gekko's ironic victory lap. |
| BeliefnetNell MinowWhile Douglas continues to be enough to make the entire movie worth watching, there is little chemistry with LeBoeuf or between LeBoeuf and Mulligan. |
| Cleveland Plain DealerClint O'ConnorOliver Stone bathes his boardrooms in the glossy sheen of deceit. Strong performances by Michael Douglas and Shia LaBeouf make this fun, if not quite riveting. |
| Big Picture Big SoundJoe LozitoThis sequel -- like its iconic character -- is every bit as slick, relevant and, yes, mature as you'd want it to be. |
| Laramie Movie ScopeRobert RotenAdvances the interesting proposition that Wall Street has become so corrupt that Gordon Gekko now seems like a hero compared to the rest of these slime balls. |
| The Hollywood ReporterKirk HoneycuttThat rare sequel that took its time -- 23 years -- so it not only advances a story but also has something new to say. |