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Watch Wall Street Money Never Sleeps Live

Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps takes the number one spot of the box office with $19 million on its opening debut last weekend. The long awaited sequel to 80?s film "Wall Street" managed to earn $5,330 on each of its 3,565 screens however it still long way to reach its total $70M budget to make the film.

Meanwhile, the owl hero animated film by the visionary director Zack Snyder (Watchmen, Dawn Of The Dead), Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole, performed short and only earned $16.3 million on its opening weekend in over 3,500 screens which is quite far from its production cost of $100 million.

Watch Wall Street Money Never Sleeps Live

Stone deftly coordinates crisp dialogue, knockout performances and masterful editing to construct possibly the most important film of the year. Too few of us understand what happened in 2008, and, Hollywoodized as it is, Money Never Sleeps is as comprehensible an explanation as I've seen. And when I say knockout performances, I'm including the wrongly maligned LaBeouf, who fully holds his own with Douglas, Josh Brolin and Frank Langella. Yet there's a reason I can't completely buy his character: his babyfaced looks. He's a couple of years older than Charlie Sheen was when he faced off against Douglas in the original film, but Sheen's character is on the very bottom rung of the ladder when we meet him; Jake, at age 22, is already well up in the hierarchy. Even though this is LaBeouf's most important role and, I believe, his best I can't fully accept his youth.

There's a greater problem beyond the fact that we're dealing with arcane fiduciary subjects that 99 percent of Americans, me included, don't understand, and that's Josh Brolin's character as head of a rival company that seduces Jake into its fold. There's nothing wrong with Brolin's delivery; the problem is in the story's structure, which requires another villain besides Gordon Gekko. In the face of Douglas's gleeful villainy from the first film and the insidious way he dominates this one, it's a losing proposition to try and compete with him.

Gekko's been in prison for his insider misdeeds; he emerges into an environment alien to him that, ironically, his practices are partially responsible for. Once one of the world's wealthiest men, he now has nothing left except estranged daughter Winnie (Carey Mulligan). Winnie's engaged to young market hotshot Jake Moore (Shia LaBeouf), whose idol is you guessed it Gordon Gekko. Against the backdrop of the 2008 crash, Jake and Gordon secretly meet behind Winnie's back, but is their emerging relationship that of concerned father and prospective son-in-law, or is it something more sinister?

Watch Wall Street Money Never Sleeps Takes 1 Spot of Box Office with $19M live stream

By: S. M. Omar Habib




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