Watch The Wolf of Wall Street movie online , Martin Scorsese continues his worship of masculine energy: energy for its own sake, energy as a means of actualizing the self, energy because there’s nothing worse in Scorsese’s cosmos than passivity, which inevitably translates as impotence. But what happens in a movie when that energy is willfully indiscriminate — shapeless, conscienceless, mindless? It becomes an endurance test. Scorsese’s youngish alter ego Leonardo DiCaprio is the real-life penny stockbroker Jordan Belfort, who delivers boastful odes (in voice-over and sometimes right to the camera) to the accumulation of cash, sex, drugs, and real estate. Working from Belfort’s memoir (the script is by Terence Winter), Scorsese tells the story entirely from his protagonist’s point of view, evidently grooving on Belfort’s conspicuous consumption and ability to live — at least for a time — by his own laws. Maybe a quarter of the movie’s three hours centers on Belfort’s attempt to hide his chicanery (and money) from an FBI agent named Denham (Kyle Chandler). The rest is a veritable orgy of immorality, each scene making the same point only more and more outrageously, the action edited with Scorsese’s usual manic exuberance but to oh-so-monotonous effect.
{[[jai.shiri.}} WATCH THE WOLF OF WALL STREET MOVIE ONLINE FREE | DOWNLOAD MOVIE
Watch The Wolf of Wall Street movie online , Martin Scorsese continues his worship of masculine energy: energy for its own sake, energy as a means of actualizing the self, energy because there’s nothing worse in Scorsese’s cosmos than passivity, which inevitably translates as impotence. But what happens in a movie when that energy is willfully indiscriminate — shapeless, conscienceless, mindless? It becomes an endurance test. Scorsese’s youngish alter ego Leonardo DiCaprio is the real-life penny stockbroker Jordan Belfort, who delivers boastful odes (in voice-over and sometimes right to the camera) to the accumulation of cash, sex, drugs, and real estate. Working from Belfort’s memoir (the script is by Terence Winter), Scorsese tells the story entirely from his protagonist’s point of view, evidently grooving on Belfort’s conspicuous consumption and ability to live — at least for a time — by his own laws. Maybe a quarter of the movie’s three hours centers on Belfort’s attempt to hide his chicanery (and money) from an FBI agent named Denham (Kyle Chandler). The rest is a veritable orgy of immorality, each scene making the same point only more and more outrageously, the action edited with Scorsese’s usual manic exuberance but to oh-so-monotonous effect.
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