Wall Street
Wall Street (1987)

Wall Street

2/5
(14 votos)
7.4IMDb56Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

Carl's glasses are back on after he takes them off.

Reflection visible in the window of Bud's apartment when Gekko is giving a speech to Carl.

Gekko's shoes during the meeting with the union representatives.

As Bud is leaving Gekko's office during their initial meeting, Bud's tie is perfectly straight and all the way up to his neck.

When Bud reaches the other side of the door, his tie is crooked and half way down his chest.

The amount of water on Gekko's coat during the final confrontation with Fox in the park.

When Gekko drops Bud from the limo, the street is completely dry when just a couple of blocks before it was raining abundantly.

Davidoff Cuban cigars were available from 1970 to 1992.

Not all Davidoff cigars were made in the Dominican Republic.

When Gordon Gekko is walking away from Bud Fox in the dressing room, Bud Fox says, "I am not just another broker.

" If you look at Gordon's shoes as he comes around the lockers he is wearing a suit with a pair of tennis shoes (full screen) When Lou Mannheim gives Bud the speech about money making you do things you don't want to do, the mic under Mannheim's tie is visible.

The painting behind Gekko changes with reaction shots while he is negotiating with Wildman upstairs at the beach house.

In the poolside meeting between Bud, Gekko, and Gekko's lawyer, when Bud puts on his sunglasses and replies "piece of cake", the lighting is visible in his sunglasses.

When Gekko gives bud fox his ''wake up'' call from the beach, the sun is in the west.

In the opening of the movie it is established that it is 1985.

The computer screen calendar (May 6, 1985 5:23 am) in Bud's apartment (as the naked girl leaves) confirms the 1985 setting.

However, Marvin tells Bud Fox that Gecko sold NASA stock short after the Challenger Disaster.

The Challenger vehicle was not destroyed until 1986.

The Space Shuttle Challenger disaster occurred on January 28, 1986, when Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds into its flight, leading to the deaths of its seven crew members.

The spacecraft disintegrated over the Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of central Florida, United States at 11:39 a.

EST (16:39 UTC).

The character of Marvin was speaking about an event that had not yet happened.

At the beginning of the movie, Bud Fox and Marvin ('John C.

McGinley' (qv)) are talking about the Challenger Explosion, and how Gordon Gekko was shorting NASA stock right after the explosion.

While NASA is a government agency and has no stock to short, the notion that Gordon Gekko would do such a thing is clearly intended by Marvin as a jokehyperbole on the theme that Gekko always thinks of a way to make a profit before anything else.

In his first meeting with Gekko, Bud refers to Bluestar as having "eighty medium body jets.

" There's no such thing as a "medium" body aircraftjust narrow and wide.

Bud may just be revealing his ignorance about aircraft, though he otherwise seems fairly well-informed about Bluestar and the airline business.

In the meeting at Bud's apartment, when his father shakes Gekko's lawyer's hand as the lawyer is about to leave, the editing on the handshake has one complete handshake (extend, shake, pull back) on Carl's line then just the lawyer pulling his hand back from the handshake on his line.

The lawyer appears to be pulling back twice from a single handshake.

Lisa the high class hooker's hairstyle changes slightly for no apparent reason from Bud's front door to the limo interior.

When Bud Fox first talks to Roger Barnes in his office, a lighting stand (a so-called C-Stand) is reflected in the computer monitor on the desk.

Wildman is shown typing on a computer keyboard.

Glare makes it appear as though the screen is off.

When Bud Fox first talks to Roger Barnes in his office, ironically right after Bud tells Roger, that no one else can hear them a boom mic is visible.

In scene of the boardroom of Blue Star Airlines, the entire aircraft fleet to be sold is referred to as "737s".

In a previous scene in the Blue Star hangar, the aircraft seen are a DC-9 and a BAC 1-11.

Bud is arrested on a federal offense, yet walks into the NY State Supreme Court at the end of the film, not the Federal Court, which is next door.

Only two.

45 Lugers were made, not six as Gekko claims.

Throughout the entire film, several characters, including Gordon Gekko and Bud Fox, refer to the "Wall Street Chronicle," a fictional paper that does not exist in real life.

On two occasions, however, 'Charlie Sheen' (qv) (Bud Fox) refers to the actual "Wall Street Journal" by mistake(1) (at around 40 mins) when Bud Fox is talking with Marvin ('John C.

McGinley' (qv)), and (2) (at around 36 mins) when Bud Fox is talking with Roger ('James Spader' (qv)).

When Bud first enters the party at Gordon's house in the Hamptons, Gordon introduces him to the party guests, Sam Ruspoli (Darien's boyfriend) being first.

Later after talking with Darien, Kate Gekko again introduces Sam to Bud, by asking "if they have met", to which Sam replies "no".

He had met Bud less then 5 minutes before.

When Rudy, Gekko's 3-year old son, tosses the raspberry at Gekko's lawyer, it first flies downward onto the patio table, but in the next shot it hits Gekko's lawyer in the face.

When Gordon Gekko is sitting on the couch watching the financial news and the plummet of Blue Star, his son Rudy moves in front of the television from right to left in a toy car.

When the camera pans out to show the whole room, Rudy is now back off to the right of the television and a water bottle appears in his hand.

News reports do not include the goings-on of individual investors because it violates privacy laws; therefore, there is no way that Larry should have known that it was Gordon who bought large shares of Anacot steel, nor should Gordon have known that it was Larry who bought the takeover shares of Bluestar airlines.

There is no known IQ test given to 3-year old children, as stated by Gekko of his son, who "had the highest IQ score in his class.

" After Bud's initial meeting in Gekko's office and Gekko asks, "You got a card?", the camera crew can be seen reflecting in the door behind.

Buddy readily admits his guilt and remorse about his crime of using inside information, as evidenced by his tears in the office when they took him away, and also his willingness to cooperate with the SEC, the police department and the postal inspector.

This, which carries a lot of weight with judge and jury, would have been more than enough for Buddy to receive only probation for his crimes, and not jail time, even more so because it was his first offense and because he returned the money that he acquired illegally.

When Bud first meets Natalie, Gekko's Secretary, her desk is near the elevators with a long hallway that leads to Gekko's office.

When Bud leaves Gekko's office after their initial meeting, her desk is right outside the door.

When Gordon and Darien are walking down the street talking about bud, in one scene a photographer and people are behind them, and in the very next scene the photographer and those around him have disappeared.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
24 April 1988 USA USD 40,978,333
17 April 1988 USA USD 40,496,466
10 April 1988 USA USD 39,929,876
3 April 1988 USA USD 39,599,336
27 March 1988 USA USD 39,314,866
20 March 1988 USA USD 38,944,912
13 March 1988 USA USD 38,534,148
6 March 1988 USA USD 38,147,034
28 February 1988 USA USD 37,609,713
21 February 1988 USA USD 36,938,942
15 February 1988 USA USD 36,185,920
7 February 1988 USA USD 35,251,482
31 January 1988 USA USD 33,849,454
24 January 1988 USA USD 32,069,634
17 January 1988 USA USD 29,808,822
10 January 1988 USA USD 26,643,104
3 January 1988 USA USD 22,467,080
27 December 1987 USA USD 14,722,326
20 December 1987 USA USD 8,514,908
13 December 1987 USA USD 4,104,611
USA USD 43,848,100
UK GBP 2,850,868
Sweden SEK 7,520,675
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
13 December 1987 USA USD 4,104,611 730
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
24 April 1988 USA USD 336,188 253
17 April 1988 USA USD 442,317 308
10 April 1988 USA USD 240,119 259
3 April 1988 USA USD 155,930 166
28 March 1988 USA USD 237,322 219
20 March 1988 USA USD 292,574 228
13 March 1988 USA USD 236,202 243
6 March 1988 USA USD 334,858 331
28 February 1988 USA USD 451,652 446
21 February 1988 USA USD 561,150 423
15 February 1988 USA USD 606,645 474
7 February 1988 USA USD 942,830 762
31 January 1988 USA USD 1,278,457 934
24 January 1988 USA USD 1,543,464 883
17 January 1988 USA USD 2,065,196 967
10 January 1988 USA USD 2,817,932 988
3 January 1988 USA USD 4,454,390 989
27 December 1987 USA USD 4,407,619 987
20 December 1987 USA USD 3,067,206 743
13 December 1987 USA USD 4,104,611 730

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