Sir Larry Wildman, the British takeover artist played by Terence Stamp, is widely believed to be modeled after Sir Gordon White of Hanson PLC. Hanson is a company that does nothing but acquisitions, liquidations, and wholesale deconstruction of companies.
Director Cameo: [Oliver Stone] on the phone during the montage of deals being made.
Hal Holbrook's fatherly character, Lou, is named for director Oliver Stone's real father, Louis Stone, a Wall Street stockbroker who died a year before this film's release.
The story is loosely patterned after the junk bond/insider trading scandals of the '80s.
Working title: "Greed".
The movie's line "Greed... is good." was voted as the #70 of "The 100 Greatest Movie Lines" by Premiere in 2007.
As of 2007, this is the only movie to win both an Oscar (Best Actor: Michael Douglas) and a Razzie (Worst Supporting Actress: Daryl Hannah) for acting.
The movie's line "Greed, for lack of a better word, is good." was voted as the #57 movie quote by the American Film Institute (out of 100).
When Bud Foxx gets out of the car to take the long walk up the stairs to the court room at the end of the movie, he passes by a newspaper stand in the background with a poster for Fortune magazine. It has his picture on the front cover.
Gordon Gekko's "Greed is good" speech was inspired by a similar speech given by Ivan Boesky at the University of California's commencement ceremony in 1986. Boesky was a Wall Street arbitrageur who paid a $100 million penalty to the SEC to settle insider trading charges later that same year. In his speech, Boesky said "Greed is all right, by the way. I want you to know that. I think greed is healthy. You can be greedy and still feel good about yourself."
Anacott Steel is the name of one of the companies that are in play. It is also the name of one of the semi-pro football teams referred to in The Longest Yard (1974). It is not a real company.
At the Teldar Paper stockholders meeting, the name card of the man at the end of the back row on the right hand side reads "Sean Stone" (it can be seen over Gordon Gekko's shoulder). Sean Stone is Oliver Stone's son, who also featured in the movie.
The movie begins by saying it is set in 1985. However, during the first conversation between Marvin and Bud, Marvin mentions one of his clients selling stock seconds after the Challenger space shuttle explosion which, in fact, didn't happen until January 1986.
In the UK sitcom "Only Fools and Horses" (1981) the character of Del Boy reinvents himself as a "Yuppy Businessman" after seeing Wall Street (1987) several times and refers to his new red braces as "Gordon Gekko braces".
Oliver Stone later admitted that everyone involved told him Daryl Hannah was miscast and told him to replace her, but he was too proud. This caused tension on set particularly with Sean Young who wanted the role herself.
The scene where Bud confronts Gekko in his office is primarily composed of two extended takes, separated by the cut to the reverse angle shot of Gordon shouting "Because it's wreck able!" The remainder of the scene is all an unbroken take.