Movie Review: ‘The Wolf Of Wall Street’
December 26, 2013
Sometimes, the best publicity for a movie is a battle with the MPAA. Just ask Harvey Weinsten and the movie “Bully.” That is what (intentionally/unintentionally) happened with “The Wolf Of Wall Street” (Trailer). It was supposed to come out on Nov. 15, but after being given an NC-17 rating by the board, Martin Scorsese had to go back and cut some more material out of his three hour biopic of one Jordan Belfort.
Which is why it was pushed back to Christmas (pushing back “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit” to Jan. 17. The same distributor was putting out both movies and did not want to compete against itself). I could not be happier that it got pushed back, either. Compared to last years “Les Miserables” and “Django Unchained,” this year’s releases needed a kick in the butt to be anywhere near as good.
Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio), for all intents and purposes, was a self made man. His parents were accountants, and he wanted to go to Wall Street in the late 1980s to become a stock broker. He quickly got a job, became good buddies with the boss (Matthew McConaughey) and was taught all of the ins and outs of the business. Including the not so legal ins and outs.
Well, his first actual day as a stock broker, Black Monday happens, and the firm he works for quickly goes under. Back to being on the bottom, Belfort finds out about “penny stocks,” companies too little to be sold on the actual stock market, where the commission for a broker goes from 1% of the sale to 50% of the sale. If he can land some big fish on these worthless stocks, he could probably make fat cash quickly, with no one none the wiser.
But that illegal activity is just the tip of the iceberg. Drugs. Money laundering. Drugs. Drugs. Prostitution. Tax fraud. Bribing officials. You name it, this guy did it. With the help of his very awkward buddy, Donnie Azoff (Jonah Hill), there is not anything they cannot accomplish, or at least nothing that can not be bought.
“The Wolf Of Wall Street” has a huge cast of characters, most of them actually quite important and memorable. Rob Reiner plays his dad, an angry accountant, and Kyle Chandler the FBI agent trying to bring him down. Cristin Milioti plays his original wife, and Margot Robbie plays his new wife. Jon Bernthal plays a drug dealer, and Jon Favreau his lawyer. Finally, last but not least, P.J. Byrne, Kenneth Choi, Henry Zebrowski, Brian Sacca and Ethan Suplee play his original start up friends and workers who carry him to the top.
“The Wolf Of Wall Street” can best be summed up by three words: Unforgiving, real and amazing.
I initially groaned at the three hour run time, and although it can be difficult to make it through if you drink a lot of fluids during the movie, the viewings at home when you can pause will be easy peasy. The three hours are full of so much tension and energy (while also constantly moving the story forward) that it all flies by in a jiffy. In the last twenty minutes or so, the extreme length became noticeable as the movie slowed down. But slowing down makes sense at that point in the movie, to fully understand that Belfort’s bubble had finally been burst.
The acting performances by everyone involved was incredible. DiCaprio, despite looking like himself, felt like a completely new man. Every time he got up on the microphone, I was in awe at the intensity and heartfelt that he showed. The second “chest bumping song” scene is unforgettable. On the other side, Hill did not look or sound like his normal self at all. Dare I say, he has actual acting talent?
The movie definitely earns its R rating, and it is pretty clear why originally it was given the NC-17. It was incredibly dark and funny, so much that I could not tell if I really wanted to laugh or run and hide from the screen. It is a twisted version of the American Dream, a train wreck that somehow rampaged through the country side, and something that I could not take my eyes off.
Although I doubt it will be considered the best film of 2013, it can certainly be considered the most ambitious.
5/5