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Wall Street: l'argent ne dort jamais

Titre original : Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
  • 2010
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 13min
NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
108 k
MA NOTE
Michael Douglas and Shia LaBeouf in Wall Street: l'argent ne dort jamais (2010)
Emerging from a lengthy prison stint, Gordon Gekko finds himself on the outside of a world he once dominated. Looking to repair his damaged relationship with his daughter, Gekko forms an alliance with her fiancé Jacob (Shia LaBeouf), and Jacob begins to see him as a father figure. But Jacob learns the hard way that Gekko – still a master manipulator and player – is after something very different from redemption.
Lire trailer1:38
15 Videos
99+ photos
DramaFinancial Drama

Aujourd'hui sorti de prison mais toujours snobé par ses pairs, Gordon Gekko travaille avec son futur gendre, un courtier idéaliste. Il découvre un moyen de faire tomber un ennemi de Wall Str... Tout lireAujourd'hui sorti de prison mais toujours snobé par ses pairs, Gordon Gekko travaille avec son futur gendre, un courtier idéaliste. Il découvre un moyen de faire tomber un ennemi de Wall Street et de rebâtir son empire.Aujourd'hui sorti de prison mais toujours snobé par ses pairs, Gordon Gekko travaille avec son futur gendre, un courtier idéaliste. Il découvre un moyen de faire tomber un ennemi de Wall Street et de rebâtir son empire.

  • Réalisation
    • Oliver Stone
  • Scénario
    • Allan Loeb
    • Stephen Schiff
    • Stanley Weiser
  • Casting principal
    • Shia LaBeouf
    • Michael Douglas
    • Carey Mulligan
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,2/10
    108 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Oliver Stone
    • Scénario
      • Allan Loeb
      • Stephen Schiff
      • Stanley Weiser
    • Casting principal
      • Shia LaBeouf
      • Michael Douglas
      • Carey Mulligan
    • 280avis d'utilisateurs
    • 269avis des critiques
    • 59Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos15

    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Trailer 1:38
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Clip 0:47
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Clip 0:47
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Clip 1:09
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Financial News Clip 1)
    Clip 0:28
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Financial News Clip 1)
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (The Right Question)
    Clip 1:09
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (The Right Question)
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Financial News Clip 3)
    Clip 0:40
    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (Financial News Clip 3)

    Photos335

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    + 329
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Shia LaBeouf
    Shia LaBeouf
    • Jake Moore
    Michael Douglas
    Michael Douglas
    • Gordon Gekko
    Carey Mulligan
    Carey Mulligan
    • Winnie Gekko
    Josh Brolin
    Josh Brolin
    • Bretton James
    Richard Stratton
    Richard Stratton
    • Prison Cage Guard
    Harry Kerrigan
    • Prison Guard
    Sunil Hirani
    • Sunil Hirani
    Maria Bartiromo
    Maria Bartiromo
    • News Host
    Austin Pendleton
    Austin Pendleton
    • Dr. Masters
    Thomas Belesis
    Thomas Belesis
    • Zabel Trader
    Frank Langella
    Frank Langella
    • Louis Zabel
    Eric Purcell
    • Jeweler
    Christian Baha
    Christian Baha
    • Hedge Fund Chief
    John Buffalo Mailer
    John Buffalo Mailer
    • Robby
    Melissa Lee
    • Newscaster
    Annika Pergament
    Annika Pergament
    • Reporter
    Julianne Michelle
    Julianne Michelle
    • Club Party Girl
    Vanessa Ferlito
    Vanessa Ferlito
    • Audrey
    • Réalisation
      • Oliver Stone
    • Scénario
      • Allan Loeb
      • Stephen Schiff
      • Stanley Weiser
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs280

    6,2108.4K
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    Avis à la une

    6mike-3842

    Sadly, a wasted opportunity

    Having waited impatiently over a year to see this film I found it disappointing. I will tell you why.

    Firstly, Oliver Stone and Michael Douglas always said they were amazed that Gordon Gekko was an inspiration for many a man to take up a job on Wall Street. Gekko had been intended to be a repulsive character representing greed. The fact that he was, in fact so inspirational was the reason that Wall St was such a hit. In the new film Gekko's edginess is gone. He seems almost human, and save a couple of good lines, he is an inspiration for nobody.

    Second, The financial crisis has provided remarkable material that could have been made into a fast moving and exciting storyline similar to the first film. Instead Oliver Stone has chosen to tell a moral tale. The trouble is the character that Stone holds up as a helpless victim deserved his fate and Gekko also makes a choice that is supposedly the moral one but he does it only because he can afford to.

    The message in the story? For me it's just that nobody knows what is moral any more, not even people who make films about morality.

    Should you watch it? Yes, it's engaging and fun but don't expect the wheeling, dealing testosterone of the first film. This is a story about people, not deal making. It's just OK.
    bobbynear

    pitiful sequel

    SPOILER WARNING

    I'm afraid I have to add my voice to the others who have made negative comments on this film. I finally got to see it on HBO and just barely got through it. An absolutely dreadful sequel.

    The story should have picked up where the first left off. I actually felt sorry for Bud Fox at the end as he walked into prison. Now I find out that everything just went swimmingly and he's now a multi millionaire after selling the airline that was so much a focus of the original story. A huge insult to all of us and an embarrassment to Charlie Sheen, as if he needed another one, in a cameo that had no point other than to wreck the character from the first Wall Street.

    Don't like any of the actors here. Really miss Martin Sheen who always adds something in whatever he is in. Have no interest in the main characters this time around and I agree that Michael Douglas looks as if he can't stay awake and I don't blame him.

    Sequels are virtually never any good. Once you catch lightning in a bottle, you don't go out and stand in a field in a rainstorm hoping you can do it again without getting electrocuted. Oliver Stone did himself and his reputation nothing but harm in this pointless, witless and uninteresting tale.
    4Faizan

    "If you stop telling lies about me, I will stop telling the truth about you."

    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps isn't the sharp, critical film that its makers want you to think of it as. The sequel to the supremely influential, endlessly quotable original from the 80's is a dull whimper about what triggered the present financial meltdown and though it's cut from the same cloth as the original, it possess all of the bark yet, sadly, none of the bite.

    Gordon Gekko is a name that defined an era. Played by Michael Douglas twenty three years ago, he reverberated in the minds of viewers as a ruthless, amoral investor without a soul. Years later, the sequel finds him released after serving his prison sentence. Cut to seven years after his release, and its 2008, the dawn of the financial crisis. Gekko is now known as a speaker publicly vilifying the notion of greed in corporate America while simultaneously, and some would reckon quite ironically, publicizing his book inspiringly titled "Is Greed Good". A loner who travels in subways, he is estranged from his daughter Winnie (Carey Mulligan, androgynously unglamorous) who is engaged to a young trader named Jake Moore (Shia LaBeouf). Jake bumps into Gekko at one of his speeches (the films finest scene) and the two form a mentor-protégé relationship that irks Winnie but allows Jake to benefit by plotting revenge from Bretton James (Josh Brolin, the films principle villain), suspected of being responsible for the suicide of Louis Zabel, a close friend and confidant of Jake.

    If the film sounds like a mess of relationships, then it is. As muddled as Stone's own political activism it has no clarity on what its trying to say. From trying to rationalize the reasons behind the market crash to the impulsive nature of human behaviour, it doesn't get either right. Not helping are the actors that Stone assembles. It's a mystery to me why Shia LaBeouf is constantly being thrust down viewer throats in film after film by studios convinced he is the next best thing. He is not, and despite being dressed up in expensive designer garb, cannot pass off as being anything more convincing than a working intern. His relationship with Gekko has none of the enticing quality that Charlie Sheen's Bud Fox did and a cameo appearance by Sheen only underscores this disparity. Douglas himself has none of the limelight. He has some powerful lines, but feels largely sidelined by the revenge/relationship/murder subplots and behaves uncharacteristically, especially in the very last scene (these were probably added as an afterthought). After showing some promise of returning to his incendiary, often infuriating filmmaking style and point of view with his previous film W, director Stone seems to have gone back to being comfortable working with drab studio approved material.

    Not only was the original Wall Street a tremendously entertaining film, but one that was blessed with the critical foresight of its maker. The sequel partially entertains but does not have a new perspective. It is neither critical nor insightful and could have, with the same script and actors, been the work of a lesser director than Stone. The films themes are also impersonal - none of the characters suffer directly from the financial crisis the way they did in the original, they suffer from their own incompetent decision making, a sharp departure from how the original handled and fused stock trading with personal loss and gain.
    eastcoastguyz

    Another movie ruined in part by a song score

    You like songs, that's nice, they belong on the radio. There were so many dramatic moments ruined in this film by pushing in a song and turning it up LOUDER AND LOUDER, to try to make up for a dramatic moment that was lost by using a song. Dramatic underscore that's written by a real film composer is what makes the music work in a film. Stuffing songs into it is nothing more than the production company trying to make money selling a soundtrack album that has no real relationship to the film. You might notice on soundtracks they include songs that weren't even in the film! Ever since David Chase ruined The Sopranos with poorly placed songs people have come to accept this as what they should do. Get back to the basics of music scoring.

    The plot was truly horrible. So many disjointed ideas that didn't come together to form any sort of story.
    4supah79

    It diminishes it's excellent predecessor

    I have mentioned before that director Oliver Stone seriously thought about retiring after Natural Born Killers. That movie took so much out of him (and I think the previous JFK did also in the aftermath of that film), that he said: "I don't think I have another one in me". At that time I thought he was crazy. But looking back at what he has made since NBK. Maybe not… Stone's new film has 3 maybe 4 good scenes and all of them were in the trailer. The scenes of the release of Gekko are well done and set up for a nice premise. But it all just falls apart. Or it really never gets going. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps fits perfectly in the new Oliver Stone trend. Before 1994, his films were raw, edgy and a little rebellious. World Trade Center, W. and Wall Street 2 all have the appearance of politically engaging or hard-hitting films. But they are not. Tame would be an understatement. Pleasing would be better. Oliver Stone has lost his will to fight. He's got bills (probably a big house, swimming pool, alimony and stuff). He just wants a job and please the studio and the audience. It almost looks like he doesn't want much hassle with his films after they come out.

    Wall Street 2 is such a disappointment I don't know where to start. Maybe the biggest let down was in the smallest amount of celluloid: the cameo of Charlie Sheen as Bud Fox. His character Fox was a character we could relate to. Especially in his scene with his father Martin Sheen. But his cameo was so wrong, so out of place, so not Bud Fox, it diminishes the entire first movie. Bud Fox is now Charlie from Two and a Half Man.

    Let me go on with the characters: The successor of Bud Fox is now Jake Moore, a kid who doesn't blink when he gets a 1.5 million dollar bonus. Off course, in the banking industry this is normal. So, it is authentic that Jake doesn't flinch. His girlfriend has an Iphone, does something with a website but other then that they really don't have to work for a living seeing the house they live in. Live really has no challenges left for these two. So maybe that why Jake has such a hard on for his 'Green Project'. But I'm just guessing here. Bud Fox wanted to be filthy rich, he wanted to be a player. Jake Moore doesn't want anything. And we should watch for him for 2 somewhat hours… Josh Brolin, the actor with the single most dangerous look in Hollywood, comes off as such a whiny boy. You do not believe he is the successor of Gordon Gekko. One or two times Shia LaBoeuf's character Jake Moore went head to head with Brolin and I couldn't help but think: "This is so unbelievable. Brolin's character should clock this spoiled brat right on the nose". If anyone can tell me what value or what message I should take from the motorcycle-scene: you can e-mail me.

    Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps misses edge, a believable script and ditto characters. It is a missed opportunity at best, and a total failure if I am really honest. It demises it's classic predecessor, has a weak script where the cutthroat mentality in the banking industry is played out in such a cliché manner. Josh Brolin is grossly underused. Shia LaBoeuf is overplayed, because he's not that great an actor. Not as a serious adult anyway. But that's Stone's fault. Charlie Sheen isn't a great actor, but 20 years ago Stone could direct him in a way that made him believable. That Oliver Stone is no more, as you can see with the awful cameo of Sheen. The problem for this sequel is that it totally diminishes the first film. It takes all the good things from the first film and throws it out. What's left is chewed up, spit out and rehashed. Money never sleeps, but the audience does.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      In preparation for his role, Shia LaBeouf worked extensively with traders and researchers on the world of finance and economy. He even invested $20,000 and ended up making more than $400,000. A few people who trained him were later arrested for illegal acts of trading.
    • Gaffes
      When he hands the Chinese the Johnny Walker as a gift, he does not say what the subtitles indicates as "This is for you -- American Whiskey". What he says is actually translated as "I think you will like this".
    • Citations

      Gordon Gekko: I think, the man that you loved like a father who threw himself under a subway? I think you're angrier than you think you are. And I think you wanna be in the family business.

      Jacob Moore: Which is what?

      Gordon Gekko: Payback. Except I'm not in that business anymore. Because the one thing I learned in jail is that money is not the prime asset in life. Time is.

    • Versions alternatives
      There are two versions, the theatrical release, and the one presented at Cannes for the film's debut. The runtimes are, respectively: "2h 13m (133 min)" and "2h 16m (136 min) (Cannes)".
    • Connexions
      Edited from La Mémoire dans la peau (2002)
    • Bandes originales
      Beatin' Down the Block
      Written by Ali Dee (as Ali Theodore), Julian Davis, Robert Miller, Joe Smart and Yusef Jackson

      Performed by Basko feat. Nomadik & Chris Classic (as Classic)

      Courtesy of DeeTown Entertainment

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    FAQ26

    • How long is Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Is "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" based on a book?
    • How much time has lapsed between the original movie and this one?
    • Are any of the characters and actors from "Wall Street" returning for this sequel?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 29 septembre 2010 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Sites officiels
      • Official site
      • Stream Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps officially on Disney+ Hotstar Indonesia
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Wall Street: El dinero nunca duerme
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 1 State Street Plaza, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(interior: Gordon Gekko's London office)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Twentieth Century Fox
      • Pressman Film
      • Dune Entertainment
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 70 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 52 474 616 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 19 011 188 $US
      • 26 sept. 2010
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 134 748 021 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 13 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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