Oliver
Stone’s Wall Street takes the
audience through the intricacies of crooked Wall Street trading as we observe unethical
action after unethical action. At the
core of the film the audience truly begins to understand the twisted ideology
of those who take great pleasure in ruining other’s hard work. Gordon Gekko’s of the world control typically
engage in little risk of his or her own personal fortunes and relies on others
to receive a large profit. Of course
what is Wall Street but greed mixed with post-modernity.
In
an inconceivable world of fixed exchanges and controlled information, and in
order to attain and garner more potential wealth individuals such as Gordon
Gekko (played by Michael Douglas) go to extreme versions in order maintain
extravagance. Ethics are surely out the
window as spying and insider trading occurs frequently, and as Gekko says in
his iconic speech “The new law of evolution in corporate American seems to be
survival of the un-fittest…Greed, for lack of a better word is good.” meaning,
that in order to survive in big business one must use others as a stepping
stone in order to attain true greatness.
In Jack Boozer’s article The Commodification
of Perception he says that “Gekko wants neither the responsibility of
ownership nor the burden of management.” One of the most interesting ideas of
the film is how risky and lucrative the business transactions are for the
high-profile Wall Street traders.
High
profile traders such as Gordon Gekko allow themselves to attain great amounts
of wealth at incredibly low risk. Often
to gain startup funds, many companies at one time or another sold junk bonds to
individuals wherein a stock-broker would sell an uneducated individual bad
stock in order to gain a large commission while the investor lost nearly all of
his or her personal money. Little
changes at a higher level, in terms of justice.
As seen in the film, Gekko controlled both the supply and demand of the
stocks as information was leaked and demand either rose or tanked. Gekko, also being the majority shareholder in
a company also controlled the supply after he leaked information, as he bought
or in turn sold stocks to make a profit.
It’s at this point where the market seems to be prejudiced in terms of
the Wall Street traders who make large amounts of money considering the little
personal investment, (and in the film’s case criminal activity that had
occurred) where justice has eluded contemporary real examples of felony in
terms of wall street traders. An
interesting story ark is where the audience follows Bud Fox down, dare I say it
‘the fox hole.’
Bud
Fox (played by Charlie Sheen) is seemingly an everyman who only wishes to
fulfill his ambition of being a major player in the stock trading industry and
take not only himself, but his family out of poverty and personal debt. Bud Fox similarly follows his ambition and
follows the father-figure Gordon Gekko to ultimately betray his real father
Carl Fox (also played by Charlie’s real-life father Martin Sheen). Bud, similarly to Doctor Faustas follows his
ambition and is carried away as he signs a deal with the devil. This post-modern/post-structuralist relation
to the two allows the audience to make immediate judgments of characters and
their actions, also while we relate to Bud on a visceral level of wishing to
attain some ambition. Although, unlike
most real-life cases Bud grows a conscience and turns Gekko in saving the day
and many people their hard work.
Wall
Street becomes an observation of never-ending greed as people use one another
as stepping stones while putting up little personal risk. As Gordon says as his stock begins to plummet
and looking as though many will lose their jobs “So what if we only make 10 million
dollars.” It becomes essential that the
illusion of power becomes a crooked Wall Street trader’s greatest tool, where
they can fool an individual in to the idea where they control the power and
their own money, while all the time power is in a crooked Wall Street trader’s back
pocket.
I was really drawn in by Stone's choice to bring justice to Gekko's illegal stock market practices. I think that by having Bud have a change of heart and try to fix the damage he had done and stand up to Gekko. Not only does it make for entertaining drama but it really helps bring you back form the intensity of the greed that Gekko lives his life by. It also brings a little morality back to a unethical system which is refreshing amongst the ruthless chaos of the stock market. The sense of justice helps to deconstruct the illusion of power that Gekko works to maintain and it is very satisfying to see his illusion take a hit.
ReplyDeleteI also thought it was interesting that Stone chose to bring the characters to justice when in reality many of the people who were involved in the shady deals never were. Ethics were truly thrown out the window once Gekko was involved. When Bud finally stands up to Gekko it does give us a moment that has us hope for the morality of the character.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely some good observations here. Maybe a point or two about how what you're describing can be described as postmodern would have given it even more depth.
ReplyDelete