Tag Archives: money-never

Can Margin Call Make the Financial Crisis Interesting?

A funny thing about the financial crisis that started in 2008 and continues to affect both Main Street and Wall Street to this day: it doesn’t really translate that well to film. Well, feature films, anyway. The documentaries are great — see Inside Job , for reference — but from Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps to the HBO film Too Big to Fail , the biggest news story of the last three years seems all too small and boring when high-priced stars are acting out its machinations onscreen. Into that arena comes Margin Call ; can the star-studded fiscal drama succeed where others failed?

Read the original:
Can Margin Call Make the Financial Crisis Interesting?

Pass (on) the Salt: 12-21 DVD Roundup

With Christmas right around the corner, time is running out to find some stocking stuffers for the skinema fan on your list. Luckily, Mr. Skin has made it easy for you by rounding up the best of this week’s crop of DVDs and Blu-rays for holiday T&A, including Angelina Jolie in Salt and a fully frontal Tilda Swinton in the Blu-ray release of the arthouse flick Orlando . Salt T&A-lister and recent Golden Globe nominee Angelina Jolie doesn’t show us her salt shakers in the spy thriller Salt , but in the opening scene we see Angelina in her bra and panties as she’s being interrogated in a jail cell. If that doesn’t do it for you, you might want to check out Angelina’s naked appearances in Original Sin , Taking Lives , and the skinstant classic Gia , where she goes lesbo with Elizabeth Mitchell . Have a holly Jolie Christmas! Wall Street / Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps Out in a DVD two-pack, it’s this year’s high-stakes financial drama Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps paired with the 1987 original Wall Street . Costars Carey Mulligan and Susan Sarandon are the actresses who never strip in Money Never Sleeps , so check the first film to see Suzen Murakoshi bare boobs, butt, and bush at the 13-minute mark. Now that’s a good skinvestment! Orlando Nude on Blu-ray, Tilda Swinton stars in the Virginia Woolf adaptation Orlando , the story of an Elizabethen nobleman who is ordered by the Queen to stay forever young who turns into hot babe a few centuries later. The transformation is complete at the 56-minute mark when Tilda goes fully frontal looking into a mirror. Nice skinton, Ms. Swinton! The Matador Also nude on Blu-ray, Pierce Brosnan stars as a drunken, anxiety-ridden hit man who has to enlist the help of mild-mannered Greg Kinnear to pull off his last job in the 2005 arthouse hit The Matador . Mamtastic Mexican mamasita Azucena Medina puts the T&A in The Ma-TA-dor when she bares her butt one minute in and then goes topless on a strip club stage at the 17-minute mark. Ole !

Originally posted here:
Pass (on) the Salt: 12-21 DVD Roundup

Friday Box Office: Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps Is A Bullish Number One

Greed was good again as Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps topped the Friday night box office while the owls of The Legend of the Guardians perched at number three and Betty White latest confection, You Again , non-started at number five. Your Friday box office is here.

View original post here:
Friday Box Office: Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps Is A Bullish Number One

CNN/US President Jon Klein Fired

Jonathan Klein is out as the president of CNN/US. According to TVNewser, Klein is being replaced by HLN chief Ken Jautz. Although it hasn’t been confirmed, the website FTVLive is reporting Klein was fired. Klein, who got the position in 2004, was given a four-year extension in 2007. With CNN’s ratings in the dumps, and decisions like giving disgraced former New York governor Eliot Spitzer a show with Kathleen Parker, one has to wonder why it took so long. Of course, if this news is true, it will be interesting to see whether any of Klein’s recent moves will be reversed. Stay tuned. *****Update: CNN has now confirmed . The Associated Press is reporting he was fired and didn’t come to work today: The timing, however, is odd. Klein just remade CNN’s prime-time lineup with an 8 p.m. show starring former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, which debuts next week, and announced Piers Morgan as the replacement to Larry King.  Maybe it’s not odd at all. Maybe those pathetic decisions are the reason.

Read the rest here:
CNN/US President Jon Klein Fired

Movie Review: ‘Wall Street’ Sequel Attacks Debt, ‘Cancer’ of the Financial System

“Greed, for lack of a better word, is good.” That was the defining line of Oliver Stone’s 1987 film “Wall Street,” and his attack on the financial system that the news media would use for decades to portray businessmen as villains. The theme Stone wants viewers to take away from his sequel, “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps,” was tucked away in the credits of his film on a greenback. “In Greed We Trust,” the bill proclaimed where the words “In God We Trust” should have been. “Money Never Sleeps,” which opens in theaters Sept. 24, uses the financial crisis of 2008 as a backdrop for the comeback of Gordon Gekko, the iconic villain of the original. This time Gekko reinvents himself as a changed man, coming back bearish on housing and speculation. In a business school lecture Gekko warns, “The mother of all evils is speculation — leveraged debt.” He claims the economy is merely moving money around in circles and the business model itself is like a “cancer.” The 1987 Gekko is a shark, a killer, the viewer senses it from the outset and can anticipate the time when Gekko’s blade will rip into protégée Bud Fox’s back. This Gekko comes across as a different animal entirely, a snake that can charm you into believing he won’t sell you out to make a buck. But in the end Gekko’s still the shark, he’s just gotten better at hiding his sharp teeth. Stone’s movie weakly attempts to convince the audience that everyone is in the “game” now, and that the corruption (caused by greed and envy) has become “systemic.” From people taking out second mortgages to go shopping, to greedy real estate investors; the new evil is leverage itself. As proof it offers many characters including Josh Brolin’s Bretton James. In the film, James secretly creates a panic by spreading rumors about a competitor in order to tank its stock and acquire it. The fictional investment bank that collapses and is acquired is meant to resemble Bear Stearns that had two of its hedge funds collapse in July 2007. Liberal themes such as green energy is good and materialism is bad abound, but the story is less political than one might expect. There were no mentions of political parties or specific administrations (Bush or Obama). Stone’s movie criticizes the types of financial products that were in use and slams toxic subprime debt, but without delving into the government policies that helped create the devastating housing bubble and the financial crisis. It says nothing about the accounting rules that many economists and financial experts say helped cause the liquidity crisis. Economist and Business & Media Institute advisor Dr. Walter E. Williams explained in a Sept. 17, 2008, column that the “credit crunch and foreclosure problems are failures of government policy.” What “foolhardy government policy” was Williams referring to? The Community Reinvestment Act, which “intimidated lenders” into offering credit to more people and specifically “discourages them from restricting their credit services to low-risk markets, a practice sometimes called redlining.” A couple of scenes show closed door meetings with bankers, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department, where bankers were asking for a bailout because they were “too big to fail.” But according to BB&T’s former CEO John Allison, that’s not the whole story. Allison and others have said “most of the banks didn’t need to be saved,” and that his bank (BB&T) and others were strong-armed by the Treasury into taking bailout (TARP) funds. Allison said in a 2009 speech, “I think the news media unfortunately has been quite willing to jump on the criticism of capitalism and not the [government].” Overall, Stone’s latest film does the same thing: attacking the capitalist system and its players, rather than examining the government’s culpability. But at least viewers know his movie is fiction. Like this article? Then sign up for our newsletter, The Balance Sheet .

Go here to read the rest:
Movie Review: ‘Wall Street’ Sequel Attacks Debt, ‘Cancer’ of the Financial System

Greed is Good: 5 More Characters from the 80s Which Should Be Dusted Off Again

This weekend, Gordon Gekko returns to theaters in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps , a prospect that a few years ago, you probably never thought would happen. If Gekko, really the epitome of 1980s culture, can come back for another adventure, why not some of other nostalgic favorites? Ahead, Movieline presents the five characters from the ’80s that have yet to be resurrected, but really should. (Don’t get your hopes up, Ferris Bueller fans: Your boy hero was already resurrected for an early 1990s television show.)

Read more from the original source:
Greed is Good: 5 More Characters from the 80s Which Should Be Dusted Off Again

Shia LaBeouf Sees ‘Positives And Negatives’ To ‘Transformers’ Re-Casting

Megan Fox replacement Rosie Huntington-Whiteley is a ‘new set of eyes,’ actor says. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Shia LaBeouf Photo: MTV News “Strange” is how Megan Fox describes the way she’ll probably be feeling when she hunkers down into her seat to take in Shia LaBeouf and “Transformers 3” next summer. The 24-year-old actress was ousted from the production in a stunning turn of events in May, only to be replaced by Victoria’s Secret model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley . And while Fox told MTV News that she “might be a little jealous when I see somebody kissing my Shia,” LaBeouf acknowledged that there are both upsides and downsides to smooching with another actress while alien robots battle around them. “I think there’s positives and negatives to her not being [in the movie],” said LaBeouf, who was at the Toronto Film Festival to promote “Wall Street 2.” “It’s awesome that we get the discovery again. I think when everybody’s vetted and everybody’s been through these wars, then that discovery of the first film is nonexistent. It’s kind of beautiful in that we get a new set of eyes, a fresh set of eyes for the audience to vibe with. So you get the discovery again, which is something that wouldn’t happen if Megan came back.” Yet he still counts Fox as a good friend, and praised her turns in the first two “Transformers” flicks. As for Huntington-Whiteley , who will make her acting debut in the new film, LaBeouf said she’s “doing great,” though there’s little he could do to prepare her for the experience of working with the famously fiery director, Michael Bay. “You can only do so much,” he laughed. “Fight or flight. A tap on the back and a ‘Good luck!’ ” Check out everything we’ve got on “Transformers 3.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps’

Read the original:
Shia LaBeouf Sees ‘Positives And Negatives’ To ‘Transformers’ Re-Casting

Michael Douglas and Josh Brolin Display Their Manhood In New Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps Clip

In case you haven’t been to the zoo lately, this new clip from Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps should save you a trip to the gorilla house. Michael Douglas takes Josh Brolin to task for some of his shadier business practices and the whole thing turns into a dick measuring contest. Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps opens on September 24, and based on the clip, I’d say it’s going to 60% he-man posturing, 35% financial gobbledygook, and 5% Shia LaBeouf looking awkwardly on like a confused young doe.

Go here to read the rest:
Michael Douglas and Josh Brolin Display Their Manhood In New Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps Clip

We’re Not Sleeping On Naomi Campbell

Naomi Campbell and her boyfriend (?) walk the red carpet in a very revealing dress for the premiere of Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps during the Cannes Film Festival.

Original post:
We’re Not Sleeping On Naomi Campbell

Diane Lane Is Perfect In Cannes

An absolutely radiant Diane Lane walks the red carpet for the premiere of Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps during the Cannes Film Festival.

Originally posted here:
Diane Lane Is Perfect In Cannes