Read Common Sense Media's The Wolf of Wall Street review, age rating, and parents guide. The difference here is that The Wolf of Wall Street may be the funniest movie Scorsese has ever made. Every few minutes it hurls something so shocking and high-spirited that laughter can be the only.

That's a testament to Scorsese's outstanding. "Wolf of Wall Street" showcases Belfort Henry Hill-style, as if he were an addict touring the wreckage of his life in order to confess and seek forgiveness; but like a lot of addicts, as Belfort recounts the disasters he narrowly escaped, the lies he told and the lives he ruined, you can feel the buzz in his. When Wolf of Wall Street focuses on Belfort's business and stays in the workplace, it is at its best, taking viewers on an exhilarating ride. DiCaprio lives it up like the king of the world and swaggers into a staggering performance.

The Wolf of Wall Street

The Wolf of Wall Street spirals. If you can imagine the honey-gravel of Ray Liotta's voice in Goodfellas saying: "As far back as I can remember, I always wanted to be a stockbroker" you'll get some idea of Martin Scorsese's new movie The Wolf of Wall Street. It's a raucous, crazily energised, if occasionally slightly shallow epic on a. In the end, The Wolf of Wall Street is an outrageous and repugnant reflection of something very real and very rotten at the core of our society. The movies was going to be bigger than life: ride the tail of a major swindler, see what life was like among the obscenely rich and. In the end, The Wolf of Wall Street is an outrageous and repugnant reflection of something very real - and very rotten - at the core of our society.

Trailer The Wolf of Wall Street

Some people will inevitably be so put off by the harsh composition of the message that they fail to heed the importance of that message; but in presenting. Chris Stuckmann reviews The Wolf of Wall Street, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill, Margot Robbie, Matthew McConaughey, Jon Favreau, Kyle Chandler, Rob Reiner, Jean Dujardin, Pj Byrne, and Kenneth Choi. A scene from movie, "The Wolf of Wall Street". - Courtesy Photo.

Sometimes Belfort turns and starts talking to us, as if he is simply too high on his success A befitting review by an excellent film critic. While Wall Street and organized crime are similar in some ways - they both feature sociopaths seeking profit at the expense of morality, for example - they differ in one important aspect… I think Wolf of Wall Street was mostly true, or at least most of the ridiculous things in there actually happened. That's how Martin Scorsese's The Wolf of Wall Street comes at you. I could have taken a few more pows - which shows how much fun it is to spar with this frisky badboy.