PRINCIPAL
CAST MEMBERS
Leonardo DiCaprio: 25-year-old Jordan Belfort
Matthew McConaughey: his boss Mark Hanna
Cristin Milloti: his wife Teresa
Jonah Hill: his neighbour salesman Donnie Azoff
Rob Reiner: his father Max
Christine Ebersole: his mother Leah
Kyle Chandler: FBI agent Patrick Denham
Margot Robbie: party-goer Naomi Lapaglia
Jean
Dujardin: Swiss banker Jean-Jacques Saurel
Joanna Lumley: Naomi’s aunt Emma
REVIEW
Several times I was tempted to walk out because like a lot
of discriminating viewers I am not comfortable viewing hours of debauchery
depicted on screen. And I certainly do not like having to listen to dialogue
you would expect from a member of the Hells Angles bike gang not from
stockbrokers. It has been reported that the f-word is used 506 times in the
film; frankly, it seems like twice that many. And it’s not just the guys who
swear and curse: the women talk like that too.
And on top of that, it is too long, running almost three
hours since a lot of the hard-partying lifestyle is repetitive. Total frontal
nudity, acts of sexual depravity, explicit love-making and groping may be
eye-candy to some, but not to me. Sorry, not my style.
However DiCaprio’s depiction of the real-life swindler has
got to be one of his best and the main reason for hanging in if you can put up
with everything else.
CLASSIFICATION
FOR
NITPICKERS ONLY
- Geneva’s landmark icon, the Jet d’Eau, can be seen through the office window of the Swiss banker but it is obviously just a photo of the real thing since it does not move.
- There are just five steps leading up to the country club but in one shot directly in front there are at least a dozen steps, maybe more.
- Cell phones of the sort being used were not introduced until 2004, some five years after these events transpired.













