If you loved Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, try Snowden
A bridge between a film you've already seen and one most people haven't. Here's what they share, and what the second one does that the first one doesn't.
What they share
Both films are directed by Oliver Stone, and they both carry the cerebral mood tag, and they sit in Crime / Drama territory. If that's the register that drew you to Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
cerebral
What Snowden is
Hawaii, 2013. A laptop hum. Doubts multiply for a contractor as he witnesses wholesale data surveillance, facing impossible choices. He meets journalists in Hong Kong, sharing secrets that ignite a global firestorm. Stone's late-period biopics have a paranoid tang.

