First of all, this film has no sense of professionalism, it is obviously the story of an investment bank trader, but it does not care about money at all. It's as if a reporter doesn't care about the news and a doctor doesn't care about the patient. Lack of realism in the industry. Just look at any financial story, and the people who really live and die in it are the people who have actually spent time on Wall Street. And the male and female protagonists in this film do seem to have just picked up from gossip girls and made a stop on Wall Street.
And then the driving force of the various events is very strange. In order to invest in an energy company he likes, the hero coerces the heroine to transfer the money to him; but after the money is intercepted by the old man halfway, the woman is angry with the hero again, why? Anyway, she didn't care about the money, and it was given to other companies. Now, at most, the hero was cheated by the old man. Why should she feel that the relationship between the two had fundamentally changed? And in the end, why did the old man forgave the hero after he invested the money in the heroine of the energy company, and that energy company has nothing to do with women at all?
So why is this? The driving force of these characters' behavior is not understandable to normal people!
View more about Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps reviews