The Wolf of Wall Street is the biographical story of Jordan
Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio), a stock broker on Wall Street and is directed by Martin
Scorsese.
Belfort is keen to make money, lots of it, but sees his initial
job at L.F. Rothschild taken away from him when the firm collapses following
the 1987 stock market crash. After hitting rock bottom, he bounces back working
for a firm selling penny stocks.
He quickly discovers that he can make good commission on
these trades and quickly forms his own company Stratton Oakmont Inc. He
recruits an unlikely bunch of guys to work for him including Donnie Azoff
(Jonah Hill), who quickly becomes his right hand man.
Belfort’s extraordinary business mind ensures that Stratton
Oakmont went from strength to strength, making the huge piles of money that he
dreamt about. Forbes Magazine writes an article on the firm calling him ‘The
Wolf of Wall Street’ and the name stuck. Forbes also points out that his
methods were rather dubious and that he was misleading investors whilst Stratton
Oakmont’s staff lived a life on debauchery on the profits.
The film depicts life at Stratton Oakmont as one long outrageous
party where the only thing as important as the money is the orgy of sex and
drugs that it can buy. Here too Belfort is the ring leader, wallowing in a raucous
excess of cocaine, prescription pills, non-prescription pills, alcohol and women.
Yet when he meets Naomi (Margot Robbie) he is smitten and has
to have her. Despite her boyfriend and his wife, they are naked in bed the next
day. In the end they marry, settle down and have a child... well she does. Belfort
continues as before.
It is satire and is probably a reflection on today's society
and on Wall Street itself. Whether it is wildly exaggerated satire is open to
debate.
Eventually the FBI start investigating and Agent Patrick
Denham (Kyle Chandler) is on their case causing Belfort to attempt to smuggle all
his cash out to Switzerland. Here is assisted by a corrupt banker Jean-Jacques
Saurel (Jean Dujardin) and opens the account in the name of Naomi's aunt Emma
(Joanna Lumley).
As the FBI close in, he is offered a deal to avoid jail but Belfort
decides he doesn't want to be saved, turns it down and eventually the whole
company is taken down.
When you read up on Jordan Belfort it becomes apparent that Martin
Scorsese kept to the story as much as possible, which is a bit of a rarity for
Hollywood. What he gives us is a film that is swift, energetic and enormously
entertaining. It did not feel like a three hour production because there is not
a quiet moment in it.
It's also one of the funniest things I've seen for a long
time but that depends on your sense of humour. It is also likely to offend some
people but only if you object to explicit language, explicit sex, explicit nudity,
explicit drug etc etc.
No comments:
Post a Comment