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Gordon Gekkos Greed is Good speech from the 1987 movie Wall Street is one of that decades most well known movie scenes. It won Michael Douglas the Best Actor Academy Award and in the process helped define a whole generation of people. Gekko and his philosophy of making money at any cost became a hero to the swarms of young, ambitious yuppies of that era.
There have been several subsequent movies that have made reference to Gordon Gekko, most famously in a scene from the similarly themed 2000 movie Boiler Room, where a group of crooked stock trading Generation X-ers gather at one of their homes to watch the movie Wall Street. When the Greed is Good speech begins every person in the room is able to recite it word for word. It is apparent that Gekko has become almost a religious icon to those young crooks.
When Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps begins it is 2008 and Gekko has been out of prison for 7 years after serving 10 years for his crimes in the first movie. He lost his fortune and is no longer able to play the game. His makes his living writing books, afterwards promoting them on book tours and appearing on morning shows as a celebrity author. He also lectures about the impending financial doom that the country is headed for due to the crazy out of control greed and speculation that makes the 1980s look tame. It appears that his years in prison has put him on the road to redemption, and all he really wants now is to reconcile with his daughter, who wants nothing to do with him.
The young protagonist in this movie is Jake Moore (played by the over-rated Shia LeBeouf). He has a lot in common with Charlie Sheens Bud Fox from the first movie . hes young, aggressive and ambitious but also has a sense of ethics. He also happens to be dating Winnie Gekko (played by Carey Mulligan), who is the estranged daughter of Gordon Gekko. Jake is fascinated with Gekko and has always wanted to meet him, but Winnie wants no part of her father and forbids Jake from any contact.
Things change for Jake when his beloved boss and mentor Louis Zabel (Frank Langella) is driven to commit suicide by the actions of Bretton James (a terrific Josh Brolin). Bretton is the owner of a financial company who was somehow able to destroy the stock value of Jakes company. Jake wants revenge against Bretton, but ends up working for him anyway because Bretton is able to provide Jake the funds to bankroll his pet project dealing with green fusion power.
Jake soon afterwards meets Gordon, and they form a sort of father-son relationship. Gordon will help Jake exact his revenge against Bretton and Jake will help try to reconcile Gordon and his daughter Winnie. Its fascinating to see Jakes slow but steady turn to the ethical dark side as he eats up what Gordon teaches him.
With the economy being the current number one issue in the United States this movie could not have come at a better time. Virtually every character in this movie is out to make obscene amounts of money for themselves, and the movie does a good job explaining how they were able to wreck the economy. The inner workings of hedge funds and Wall Street institutions as they were in 2008 are explored in an obvious attempt to explain how the most recent economic crash could have occurred.
Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps is a remarkable good movie with an outstanding cast. Every actor is at the top of their craft and are excellent. But the best of them all is Michael Douglas as an older, wiser Gordon Gekko.
