DVD - 2 Disc Set - Special Edition / Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed Learn more
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| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / DTS | $23.99 |
Disc One: ; Audio commentary by director Oliver Stone; ; Disc Two: ; Introduction by Oliver Stone; Greed Is Good documentary; Deleted scenes with optional commentary by director Oliver Stone; Money Never Sleeps: the making of Wall Street
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Wall Street: Feature Film
1. Main Titles/Fly Me to the Moon [4:26]
2. Off and Running [4:38]
3. Unknowing Tip [4:17]
4. Gordon Gekko [9:58]
5. Bagging the Elephant [2:58]
6. A Gift From Gordon [2:20]
7. Business Philosophy [4:46]
8. Becoming a Player [3:39]
9. Valuable Commodity [3:35]
10. A Sure Thing [3:23]
11. Buyback Offer [8:35]
12. Wakeup Call [4:03]
13. Maintenance Crew [3:03]
14. A Safe Distance [5:11]
15. Upward Mobility [2:13]
16. The High Life [6:03]
17. Greed Works [6:25]
18. Bud's Proposal [2:27]
19. Bluestar Meeting [8:19]
20. Red Flag [1:45]
21. Liquidation [2:02]
22. We Make the Rules [4:06]
23. Greater Need [4:20]
24. Permission [2:38]
25. Countermeasures [1:34]
26. Stock Manipulation [6:06]
27. The Abyss [5:59]
28. The Best Thing/End Titles [6:37]
"Greed is good," declares Gordon Gekko, the acquisitive, unscrupulous arbitrageur of Oliver Stone's hyperbolic, Reagan-era morality play. As portrayed by Michael Douglas -- who won a well-deserved Oscar for his marvelously unsubtle histrionics -- Gekko is an unabashedly manipulative player whose wealth and stature prove irresistibly alluring to eager young broker Bud Fox (Charlie Sheen). He willingly surrenders his conscience and values -- and, by implication, his soul -- to become the tycoon's protégé. Stone's other characters don't elicit much sympathy, either: trophy girlfriends Daryl Hannah and Sean Young, would-be players James Spader and John C. McGinley, outwitted businessman Terence Stamp -- none of them seem like particularly nice people. The film's one shining beacon of morality is Martin Sheen, almost beatific as Bud's straight-arrow, working-class father. Stone takes a dim view of the Street and its blithely amoral denizens, and reveals once again the anti-establishment mindset that characterizes many of his films. However one feels about the ideology that informs it, Wall Street can still be enjoyed as an overripe and vastly entertaining melodrama, the perfect showcase for Douglas's bravura performance. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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