Wall Street

 

Wall Street (1987)

UNKNOWN
Various
Movie Reviews86%
R
1987, Drama, 2h 5m
RT Critics’ Score: 79% (UNBIASED)
RT Audience Score: 81%
Awards & Nominations: Nominated for 5 Oscars
37 wins & 179 nominations total

 

Critics Consensus

With Wall Street, Oliver Stone delivers a blunt but effective — and thoroughly well-acted — jeremiad against its era’s veneration of greed as a means to its own end
 

Audience Consensus

Wall Street is the perfect movie for anyone who loves a good story about greed and corruption. Michael Douglas steals the show as the slimy Gordon Gekko, while Charlie Sheen’s performance as the naive Bud Fox is the heart of the film. Sure, it may be a bit wordy and self-righteous at times, but who cares when you’re watching a movie that’s as entertaining as this one? Plus, it’s always fun to hate on the rich guys, right? So grab some popcorn and settle in for a wild ride through the world of high finance.
 
Movie Trailer

Movie Info

Storyline

In the early 1990s, Jordan Belfort teamed with his partner Donny Azoff and started brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont. Their company quickly grows from a staff of 20 to a staff of more than 250 and their status in the trading community and Wall Street grows exponentially. So much that companies file their initial public offerings through them. As their status grows, so do the amount of substances they abuse, and so do their lies. They draw attention like no other, throwing lavish parties for their staff when they hit the jackpot on high trades. That ultimately leads to Belfort featured on the cover of Forbes Magazine, being called “The Wolf Of Wall St.”. With the FBI onto Belfort’s trading schemes, he devises new ways to cover his tracks and watch his fortune grow. Belfort ultimately comes up with a scheme to stash their cash in a European bank. But with the FBI watching him like a hawk, how long will Belfort and Azoff be able to maintain their elaborate wealth and luxurious lifestyles?

 
Production Company(ies)
K T F Films,
 
Distributor
20th Century Fox, Warner Home Vídeo
 
Release Type
Theatrical
 
Filming Location(s)
Portofino, Genoa, Liguria, Italy
 
MPAA / Certificate
Rated R for sequences of strong sexual content, graphic nudity, drug use and language throughout, and for some violence
 
Year of Release
2013
 

Technical Specs
  • Color:
    Color
  • Sound mix:
    Datasat Dolby Digital Dolby Surround 7.1
  • Aspect ratio:
    2.39 : 1
  • Runtime:
    2h 5m
  • Language(s):
    English, French
  • Country of origin:
    United States
  • Release date:
    Release Date (Theaters): Dec 11, 1987 Original
    Release Date (Streaming): Feb 19, 2002

 
Genre(s)
Drama
 
Keyword(s)
Wall Street, R, Drama, 2h 5m, starring Michael Douglas, Charlie Sheen, Martin Sheen, Terence Stamp, Sean Young, Daryl Hannah, directed by Oliver Stone, written by Stanley Weiser, Oliver Stone, produced by Edward R Pressman, box office gross $41.3M, reviewed by Sean French, David Denby, Jonathan Rosenbaum, Variety Staff, Fernando F Croce, Geoff Andrew, Rene Jordan, Mike Massie, Leigh Paatsch, Ángel Fernández-Santos, Hilary Mantel, MPAA rating R, stockbroker, corporate raider, insider trading, greed, ambition, power, corruption, morality, ethics, finance, capitalism, New York, 1980s, Wall Street, unsparing, blunt, effective, well-acted, jeremiad, veneration, critic reviews, audience score, drama, English, 20th Century Fox, Warner Home Vídeo, surround sound mix
 

Box Office Details

Worldwide gross: $392,000,694
Worldwide gross (inflation-adjusted): $497,977,310
Worldwide gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 288
Worldwide tickets sold (est.): 54,305,050
 
US/Canada gross: $116,900,694
US/Canada gross (inflation-adjusted): $148,504,567
US/Canada gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 521
US/Canada opening weekend: $18,361,578
US/Canada opening weekend (inflation-adjusted): $23,325,594
US/Canada opening weekend ranking (inflation-adjusted): 576
 
Budget and Earnings Details
Production budget (est.): $100,000,000
Production budget (inflation-adjusted): $127,034,803
Production budget ranking: 286
Marketing and distribution budget (inflation-adjusted est.): $68,408,242
Box office net earnings to date (inflation-adjusted est.): $302,534,265
ROI to date (est.): 155%
ROI ranking: 754

 
Movie Cast & Crew

Cast & Crew

Michael DouglasCharlie SheenMartin SheenTerence StampSean Young
Michael Douglas
Charlie Sheen
Martin Sheen
Terence Stamp
Sean Young
Gordon Gekko
Bud Fox
Carl Fox
Sir Larry Wildman
Kate Gekko
Michael Douglas – Gordon Gekko
Charlie Sheen – Bud Fox
Martin Sheen – Carl Fox
Terence Stamp – Sir Larry Wildman
Sean Young – Kate Gekko
Daryl Hannah – Darien Taylor

 

Oliver StoneStanley WeiserEdward R. Pressman
Oliver Stone
Stanley Weiser
Edward R. Pressman
Director
Writer
Producer
Producer
Producer

Director(s)
Oliver Stone
 
Writer(s)
Stanley Weiser, Oliver Stone
 
Producer(s)
Edward R. Pressman

 
Movie Reviews & Awards
Film Festivals

 
Awards & Nominations
Nominated for 5 Oscars
37 wins & 179 nominations total
 
Academy Awards
Oscar Winners
 

Top Reviews
Sean FrenchDavid DenbyJonathan RosenbaumVariety StaffFernando F. Croce
Sean French
David Denby
Jonathan Rosenbaum
Variety Staff
Fernando F. Croce
Sight & Sound
New York Magazine/Vulture
Chicago Reader
Variety
Slant Magazine
WALL STREET
 All Critics (57) | Top Critics (12) | Fresh (44) | Rotten (13)
 The film benefits enormously from shrewd casting.
 
 January 28, 2020
 
 Sean French
 Sight & Sound
 TOP CRITIC
 Oliver Stone’s Wall Street is exactly what I had hoped for — a sensationally entertaining melodrama about greed and corruption in New York, a movie that evokes the power of big money so strongly that you can savor it on your tongue like Stilton and port.
 
 December 31, 2019
 
 David Denby
 New York Magazine/Vulture
 TOP CRITIC
 The sensibility of this movie is so adolescent that it’s hard to take it as seriously as the filmmakers intend us to.
 
 September 18, 2007
 
 Jonathan Rosenbaum
 Chicago Reader
 TOP CRITIC
 Watching Oliver Stone’s Wall Street is about as wordy and dreary as reading the financial papers accounts of the rise and fall of an Ivan Boesky-type arbitrageur.
 
 September 18, 2007
 
 Variety Staff
 Variety
 TOP CRITIC
 Stone’s attack on the excesses of the Me Decade could easily be dubbed Mr. Smith Goes to Wall Street.
 
 September 15, 2007 | Rating: 2/4
 
 Fernando F. Croce
 Slant Magazine
 TOP CRITIC
 Dramatically inept, the film also muddles its nave moralising.
 
 January 26, 2006
 
 Geoff Andrew
 Time Out
 TOP CRITIC
 The film is an atrocious, self-righteous coven, but the public adores it with malignant complacency. [Full review in Spanish]
 
 July 6, 2022
 
 Rene Jordan
 El Nuevo Herald (Miami)
 Douglas steals the show as the rich guy viewers love to hate.
 
 September 8, 2020 | Rating: 6/10
 
 Mike Massie
 Gone With The Twins
 Much is made of Douglas’ superbly sleazy display here, but the heart of the film is Charlie Sheen’s anchoring effort as the stock market ingenue getting a crash course in cornering other people’s cash.
 
 June 2, 2020 | Rating: 4/5
 
 Leigh Paatsch
 Herald Sun (Australia)
 A lavish misstep in the straight career of this filmmaker. [Full Review in Spanish]
 
 April 10, 2020
 
 Ángel Fernández-Santos
 El Pais (Spain)
 Michael Douglas has a splendid part here, and tackles it with relish.
 
 August 30, 2018
 
 Hilary Mantel
 The Spectator
 The conflict may be familiar, but Stone brings the mystery of Wall Street’s heros and villains, its big-stakes players and two-bit salesmen into sharp focus. It’s a look that is both exhilarating and astounding.
 
 October 11, 2016
 
 Cathy Burke
 United Press International…

 
Movie Plot & More
Plot
In the early 1990s, Jordan Belfort teamed with his partner Donny Azoff and started brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont. Their company quickly grows from a staff of 20 to a staff of more than 250 and their status in the trading community and Wall Street grows exponentially. So much that companies file their initial public offerings through them. As their status grows, so do the amount of substances they abuse, and so do their lies. They draw attention like no other, throwing lavish parties for their staff when they hit the jackpot on high trades. That ultimately leads to Belfort featured on the cover of Forbes Magazine, being called “The Wolf Of Wall St.”. With the FBI onto Belfort’s trading schemes, he devises new ways to cover his tracks and watch his fortune grow. Belfort ultimately comes up with a scheme to stash their cash in a European bank. But with the FBI watching him like a hawk, how long will Belfort and Azoff be able to maintain their elaborate wealth and luxurious lifestyles?
 
Trivia

 
Goofs / Tidbits
Michael Douglas delivers a “superbly sleazy” performance as Gordon Gekko.
 
Movie Links Wikipedia and Rotten Tomatoes

Links
Wikipedia: Go to Wiki
Rotten Tomatoes: Go to RT

 
Where to Watch

Where to Watch

 
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