The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
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Movie Overview | The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
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The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) is brilliant, brutal, and unforgettable. Scorsese’s direction, DiCaprio’s fearless performance, and the film’s unapologetic look at greed make it one of the defining movies of its decade. For anyone chasing success, it’s a must-watch reminder that the price of power is often paid in silence, not cash.
From the first frame, Scorsese makes his intentions clear: this is not subtle cinema. Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) snorts cocaine off every imaginable surface, preaches financial manipulation like gospel, and turns his brokerage firm into a frat house with a fax machine. The film’s energy is manic, shot with the adrenaline of a man who knows he’s burning out but doesn’t care. Rodrigo Prieto’s camera moves like it’s on crack too, swirling, cutting, pushing closer, while Thelma Schoonmaker’s editing keeps the film alive with a rhythm that borders on hysteria.
The Wolf of Wall Street is both a masterpiece and a moral mess. It’s outrageously entertaining, but that’s the problem. You’re laughing with Belfort long before you realise you probably shouldn’t be. Scorsese captures the rush of corruption so vividly that the consequences feel like an afterthought. By the time the law catches up, we’ve been so high on greed and glamor that we barely care who gets hurt.
