Saturday, September 25, 2010

Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps

imdb link  Photos

Plot: Gordon Gekko (Michael Douglas), the bad guy in the first Wall Street movie gets released from prison after 13 years. It's 2007, and he writes a book about the pending financial collapse of 2008, and soon young Wall Streeter Jake Moore (Shia LaBeouf) tracks him down. Jake is engaged to Gordon's daughter Winnie Gekko (Carey Mulligan). In the meantime Jake loses his job working at a Lehman Brothers-like investment bank when it goes bankrupt due to toxic assets. Jake gets a job at a rival company and hooks up with with Gordon for advice. Gordon wants to reconcile with Winnie, and Jake tries to set that up. As the financial crisis of 2008 unfolds, there is narrative about the bank crisis and Federal Reserve actions, as well as much moaning about "moral hazard."  

Review: Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps is uneven. It has some excellent scenes especially at the beginning before Michael Douglas enters the story. There are some wonderful and poetic visuals that are worth seeing. I loved the richness of the sets. The weakest part of the movie was the preaching by Michael Douglas: no one talks like that. The dramatic scenes with Michael Douglas were not that good either.

The Shia LaBeouf scenes are strong though, and I liked his scenes with Carey Mulligan too.

The plot involving the fusion power company struck me as clever. I liked how it was threaded through the movie. The plot was well-crafted to deal with the issues of the financial crisis without being too pedagogical. I suspect that someone without much financial background might be lost though.

I liked the ending. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps was enjoyable, but lacked consistent dramatic or artistic content; it is a near miss.

Cast: Shia LaBeouf, Michael Douglas, Carey Milligan

Directed by: Oliver Stone

Rating: 3.0, almost 2.5 but I liked the ambition and the subject matter.


More: They said "moral hazard" over and over again, but seldom used it correctly.

Even More:  I liked how Jake's Mom (Susan Sarandon) quits real estate and goes back to nursing.
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Sunday, September 19, 2010

The Town




imdb link  Photos

Plot:  Doug MacRay (Ben Affleck) lives in an Irish working class district called Charlestown in Boston.  "The 'town" is home to an Irish bankrobbing mafia. At the beginning, he and his friend James (Jeremy Renner) rob a bank. They take the bank manager Claire (Rebecca Hall) hostage and release her when they get away. Later Doug and Claire get romantic while FBI agent Frawley (Doug Hamm) investigates. 

Review:  An exciting movie with solid dramatic action, a great script, and  dynamic scenes. The chemistry between Ben Affleck and Rebecca Hall was tops. Ben Affleck's performance was Oscar worthy.

A highlight was the bankrobbery scene dresses as nuns, as shown in the poster. I liked the idea that these losers were organized and professional enough to pull of a Mission Impossible style crimes. I liked the Blake Lively plot line especially her roll in unravelling the final heist.

What I like about this movie is that it has everything, action scenes, flirty romance, three dimensional characters, fun chase-scenes, and a no holds barred ending.  It reminds me of Mystic River which also combined grittiness, action, and clever dialog in a crime drama.

Cast: Ben Affleck, Rebecca Hall, Jeremy Renner, Doug Hamm

Directed by: Ben Affleck

Based on the book "Prince of Thieves" by Chuck Hogan

Rating: 4.0 flasks; One of the year's best.


More:  When we lived in Pittsburgh, we knew a mafia florist too.
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