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The Wolf of Wall Street (Blu-ray + DVD + Digital HD)
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Additional Blu-ray options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
Blu-ray
March 6, 2018 "Please retry" | Combo | 2 |
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| $5.98 | $8.25 |
Blu-ray
September 7, 2021 "Please retry" | Standard | 1 |
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| $14.25 | $6.82 |
Blu-ray
May 19, 2014 "Please retry" | — | 1 |
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| $10.42 | $8.58 |
Blu-ray
March 25, 2014 "Please retry" | — | 2 |
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| $10.69 | $4.95 |
Blu-ray
July 1, 2014 "Please retry" | — | — |
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| $11.78 | $6.61 |
Blu-ray
August 18, 2014 "Please retry" | — | — |
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| $19.83 | — |
Blu-ray
May 17, 2015 "Please retry" | — | 1 |
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| $59.99 | $40.00 |
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March 25, 2014 "Please retry" | — | — |
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| — | $4.43 |
Blu-ray
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Watch Instantly with | Rent | Buy |
Purchase options and add-ons
Genre | Drama, Documentary/Biography |
Format | Blu-ray, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, Color, Subtitled, Digital_copy, Widescreen |
Contributor | Jonah Hill, Leonardo DiCaprio, Martin Scorsese |
Language | English |
Runtime | 3 hours |
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From the manufacturer
Synopsis:
Sex. Money. Power. Brace yourself for one outrageous true story directed by legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese (GOODFELLAS). Leonardo DiCaprio delivers one of the best performances of his career as a young stockbroker hungry for a life of non-stop thrills, where corruption was King and more was never enough. Together, Scorsese and DiCaprio deliver a story of American excess that is an absolute blast from start to finish.
Cast:
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Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort |
Jonah Hill as Donnie Azoff |
Margot Robbie as Naomi Naomi Lapaglia |
Matthew McConaughey as Mark Hanna |
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Product Description
Revered filmmaker Martin Scorsese directs the story of New York stockbroker Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio). From the American dream to corporate greed, Belfort goes from penny stocks and righteousness to IPOs and a life of corruption in the late 80s. Excess success and affluence in his early twenties as founder of the brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont warranted Belfort the title – “The Wolf of Wall Street.”
Sex. Money. Power. Drugs. Brace yourself for an outrageous true story from legendary filmmaker Martin Scorsese. Leonardo DiCaprio stars as a young stockbroker hungry for a life of non-stop thrills where corruption was king and more was never enough. His rise to power earned him the title The Wolf of Wall Street. Together Scorsese and DiCaprio deliver a story of American excess.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 2.40:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 0.6 x 5.4 x 6.8 inches; 2.4 ounces
- Item model number : 393325
- Director : Martin Scorsese
- Media Format : Blu-ray, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, Color, Subtitled, Digital_copy, Widescreen
- Run time : 3 hours
- Release date : March 25, 2014
- Actors : Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill
- Dubbed: : English, French, Spanish
- Subtitles: : English, French, Spanish
- Studio : Paramount
- ASIN : B00H9KKKAY
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 2
- Best Sellers Rank: #780 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #110 in Drama Blu-ray Discs
- Customer Reviews:
Videos
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: Leo's Profile (Featurette)
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: Nothing But Short Skirts
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The Wolf of Wall Street Bluray Movie Review
Carl Newberry
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The Wolf of Wall Street
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: Scoresese's Wolf (Featurette)
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0:56
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: You Work For Me
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At a three hour running time, WOLF tells the story of Jordan Belfort from his early days as a junior stock broker just before the Crash of ’87, an event that nearly ended his career before it had gotten started proper, to his landing on his feet hawking penny stocks in a Long Island boiler room, a position from which he rose to build Stratton Oakmont, a seemingly respectable brokerage firm, that was in reality just a pump and dump operation, which fraudulently over valued cheap stocks to the firm’s benefit. It was all a scam built on Jordan’s undeniable talent at the “hard sell.” While clients were fleeced, Jordan and his associates made hundreds of millions, which of course they didn’t report and pay taxes on. Ultimately, this house of cards collapsed under the scrutiny of an FBI and an SEC investigation, but Jordan and his friends lived it up while they could in a haze of women, booze, and drugs. What our Woke betters might call “toxic masculinity.” Some viewers were put off by scene after scene of bad boys living it up in one debauched bacchanal after another, but I think that was the point Scorsese and screenwriter, Terrence Winter, were trying to make: the wages of sin can look pretty attractive, that’s why so many buy in.
There is much to take away from WOLF depending on your point of view, and one of the things I got out of Scorsese’s film is that Jordan Belfort, masterfully played by Leonardo DiCaprio, is the poster boy for much of what has gone wrong in America in the last four decades, as we have become a country that no longer produces things so much as make deals that profit some at the expense of others. Where there are always winners and losers, where the only success that matters is material success, specifically material success in excess; where the winners are entitled to more…and more…and more. Jordan is like so many who came to believe that the rules were for losers, and that he was clever enough to get away with it where so many others got caught.
Yet, while many consider Jordan Belfort trash, I found qualities in him, at least as he is presented in the film, that I grudgingly admired, specifically in the way he landed on his feet after losing his high paying Wall Street job by going to work in a strip mall boiler room. The scene where DiCaprio walks in and shows the other poor fools there how to cold call a client and get his money is one of my favorites. The way he was loyal to his shlubby crew – Donny, Chester, Rugrat – a group of doughy mediocrities that are as about as far from the Cool Kids and Golden Boys as one could get, all of whom he took with him to the top, never cheating them, making them part of his success. In the end, he would give up their names to the FBI only because the Bureau had his back to the wall and he was looking at many years in prison. I was struck by the scene where, at real risk to himself, Jordan warns Donny he is wearing a wire: that is something Henry Hill would never have done. Though he is not in any way husband material, I do think Jordan genuinely cared for both of his wives.
And as far as I’m concerned, THE WOLF OF WALL STREET is one of the funniest films of the 2010s. I laughed harder at it than almost any “official” comedy of the past ten years. The sequence of Jordan and Donny under the influence of the Lemon 714 Quaaludes is a masterpiece of physical comedy, hilarious and horrifying at the same time, and played to perfection by DiCaprio and Jonah Hill. The entire cast is pitch perfect, including the aforementioned Hill, but also Rob Reiner (though in no universe do I believe he is the father of Leonardo DiCaprio), Kyle Chandler, Jon Bernthal, Ethan Suplee, Joanna Lumley, Kenneth Choi, Shea Whigham, and Jon Favreau. Matthew McConaughey has a mic drop of a cameo early in the film as Jordan’s mentor, and then walks out of the film. For me, this is the movie that put Margot Robbie on my radar; she is the epitome of drop dead gorgeous as Naomi, Jordan’s second wife. Scorsese makes better use of Jean Dujardin than THE ARTIST did, casting him as a shady Swiss banker, happy to take Jordan’s money, not so pleased to return it. That is Bo Dietl as himself; he’s become part of Scorsese’s stock company. And this is the movie that I will always believe DiCaprio should have won the Best Actor Oscar for. It is an utterly fearless performance from beginning to end, and I’m not just talking about his dance moves at Jordan’s wedding reception. Too bad he had to go up against McConaughey’s work in THE DALLAS BUYERS CLUB.
I think the final scene, where the real life Jordan Belfort introduces DiCaprio to a packed room at a sales seminar, resonates more now than it did when the movie was released. This is where Scorsese turns the camera around and it glides over the seminar’s participants sitting in rows, their rapt attention focused on DiCaprio, who after prison is reinventing himself as a motivational speaker. I think it is Scorsese’s way of saying that some of the problem, and responsibility, here rests with the audience. That guys like Jordan would never have gotten away with so much if there had not been for people who confused conniving and deviousness with smarts. Who fell for glib hucksters who had no moral qualms about telling people exactly what they wanted to hear. Looking back today, we should have paid better attention.
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Reviewed in Mexico on February 1, 2024