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Oliver Stone Wall Street Doesn't Sleep

Wall Street waited a little, just 23 years, before launching the Wall Street continuation (1987), a story that, at the time, not only gave a lot of awards to the creators (including Oscar to Michael Douglas as the CEO), but also opened the viewers to a wild and dangerous world of financial intrigue. Or maybe they didn't wait at all, but they just stormed the 2008 crisis and the streets where the fate of the world economy would come to the heart of the world scandal. Well, it's a sin not to take advantage of the situation!

It's hard to describe the story of this film, you always catch yourself thinking that you're gonna turn something around. I don't care. Who is in the story what they do and why they face the interests of these people is unable to tell without economic education. It's about the following.

Well, it's something about banks and big, very big money. Jake Moore. To be clearer, he's sitting there, where Bud Fox (Charlie Shin) was sitting in the first film, in a computer, telephone and electronic tablo room, where everyone's yelling and being aggressively gestured, depending on what's on those pills. Jake is very worried about the suicide of his boss and mentor (Frank Langella), who is the victim of some kind of financial intrigue, causing his company (or bank?) to collapse. Meanwhile, the first Wall Street hero Gordon Gecko (Michel Douglas) comes out of prison without a single penny in his pocket, and after seven years, almost triumphantly returns to the world of finance. Almost because of the black entrance. He produces a book on the world ' s main economic paradoxes and his ancestry, but does not communicate with his daughter (Cary Mulligan), who is also Jake ' s fiancée ' s easy movement of hands. The dream of revenge for boss Jake is offering Gecko a deal: he'll help him make peace with his daughter, and Gekko will give him tips and clues to destroy the bad guys who destroyed his beloved mentor. As future aunts and sons help each other, all small (family) and large (financial) disasters and heroes overestimate their moral values.

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