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Tema: El lobo de Wall Street (The Wolf of Wall Street, 2013, Martin Scorsese)

  1. #276
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    London Critics Film Circle nominations:

    Film of the Year
    "Blue is the Warmest Color"
    "Blue Jasmine"
    "Frances Ha"
    "Gravity"
    "Her"
    "The Great Beauty"
    "Inside Llewyn Davis"
    "Nebraska"
    "12 Years a Slave"
    "The Wolf of Wall Street"

    Director of the Year
    Alfonso Cuaròn, "Gravity"
    Paul Greengrass, "Captain Phillips"
    Steve McQueen, "12 Years a Slave"
    Martin Scorsese, "The Wolf of Wall Street"
    Paolo Sorrentino, "The Great Beauty"

    Actor of the Year
    Bruce Dern, "Nebraska"
    Leonardo DiCaprio, "The Wolf of Wall Street"
    Michael Douglas, "Behind the Candelabra"
    Chiwetel Ejiofor, "12 Years a Slave"
    Tom Hanks, "Captain Phillips"

    Screenwriter of the Year
    Spike Jonze, "Her"
    Joel and Ethan Coen, "Inside Llewyn Davis"
    Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope, "Philomena"
    John Ridley, "12 Years a Slave"
    Terence Winter, "The Wolf of Wall Street"

    Los Críticos de cine de Londres son el segundo premio más importante en Gran Bretaña y es un buen indicador de quienes pueden llegar a ser nominados al BAFTA. En otras palabras, esto es muy positivo para las posibilidades de Marty y de Leo en el BAFTA.


    Austin Film Critics Association Top Ten Films

    1. "Her"
    2. "12 Years a Slave"
    3. "Gravity"
    4. "The Wolf of Wall Street"
    5. "Inside Llewyn Davis"
    6. "Short Term 12"
    7. "Mud"
    8. "Before Midnight"
    9. "Dallas Buyers Club"
    10. "Captain Phillips"
    Tripley y Fincher han agradecido esto.

  2. #277
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Mas entrevistas...













    ¿De que estara hablando?....

    Derek Vinyard y Fincher han agradecido esto.

  3. #278
    The Clairvoyant Avatar de Fincher
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    ¿No podría adelantarse el estreno? Madre mía esto no es sano...
    horner ha agradecido esto.

  4. #279
    Anonimo03092020
    Invitado

    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Scorsese suele tener caemos a la Hitchcock. En After hours es un técnico de luces, vamos, que dirige un foco en el pub Berlín. En Gangs of NY hacía de rico al que robaba en su casa. ¿Sale en todas, todas?

    ¿Cuándo se estrena en España? Es para ir mirando billetes para Madrid + hotel (a no ser que un golfo lector me hospede : - )

  5. #280
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

























    tomaszapa, Derek Vinyard y Fincher han agradecido esto.

  6. #281
    Senior Member Avatar de tomaszapa
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Cita Iniciado por rohmerin Ver mensaje
    Scorsese suele tener caemos a la Hitchcock. En After hours es un técnico de luces, vamos, que dirige un foco en el pub Berlín. En Gangs of NY hacía de rico al que robaba en su casa. ¿Sale en todas, todas?

    ¿Cuándo se estrena en España? Es para ir mirando billetes para Madrid + hotel (a no ser que un golfo lector me hospede : - )
    rohmerin, en Taxi driver lo recuerdo a Scorsese a las puertas de la delegación demócrata en la que trabajaba la chica. Esta entra y se le queda Scorsese mirando con un gesto un tanto desafiante, aunque también sale de manera más clara, con algo de diálogo en la parte de atrás del taxi, como cliente del protagonista, en plan misterioso.
    horner ha agradecido esto.

  7. #282
    Chico del futuro Avatar de Marty_McFly
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Estás confundido, tomaszapa. En Taxi Driver Scorsese no tiene un cameo, sino un pequeño papel. Es el cliente que lleva el taxi a su calle y le cuenta a DeNiro que su mujer se está zumbando a otro, y que planea matarlos.
    tomaszapa y horner han agradecido esto.
    I'd imagine the whole world was one big machine. Machines never come with any extra parts, you know. They always come with the exact amount they need. So I figured, if the entire world was one big machine, I couldn't be an extra part. I had to be here for some reason.(HUGO)

  8. #283
    Chico del futuro Avatar de Marty_McFly
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    tomaszapa, Campanilla y horner han agradecido esto.
    I'd imagine the whole world was one big machine. Machines never come with any extra parts, you know. They always come with the exact amount they need. So I figured, if the entire world was one big machine, I couldn't be an extra part. I had to be here for some reason.(HUGO)

  9. #284
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Salen a la luz las primeras reviews de medios especializados:

    http://www.comingsoon.net/news/revie....php?id=112480

    Rating: 9 out of 10

    What fantastic cinematic times we live in when we can watch David O. Russell do his best Martin Scorsese impression with his ripped-from-old-headlines comedy "American Hustle" and then the one true master comes along with a movie that proves that no one does Scorsese like Scorsese himself. Of course, when one treads the subject of the stock market in a movie, one immediately thinks that ground has been well covered with the likes of Oliver Stone's "Wall Street" and its sequel or smaller films like "Margin Call" and "Boiler Room," but "The Wolf of Wall Street" proves there's still a lot more stories to tell.

    Based on Jordan Belfort's autobiographical book of the same name and staying fairly faithful to many of the key moments, "The Wolf of Wall Street" is a very different movie from those mentioned - far edgier, far more modern and of the times and probably closer to the realities of the stock market and the behavior of stock brokers (at least in the ‘90s) then some of what we've previously seen on film.

    Scorsese's fifth pairing with Leonardo DiCaprio is a very different movie for them as well, because however you slice it, this is definitely meant to be a comedy, maybe more than anything Scorsese has done in years. Granted, he's always had funny and amusing scenes and moments in almost all his movies, but translating Belfort's story to the screen leads to a hilarious film that always carries an undercurrent of sadness to think how far greed can lead a man astray.

    DiCaprio has already proven himself as a mature actor who can add real weight to any meaty role, and that's especially true with his Jordan Belfort, a man whose every word we hang upon - it doesn't hurt that Terrence Winter's adaptation is up there with some of the best screenplays Scorsese has directed. Three hours of sex, nudity and drugs would definitely get tiring, but DiCaprio really sells us on this character and makes every scene count, whomever he happens to be interacting with at the given time. Some of his more memorable moments are with Jordan's second wife Naomie, a knockout blonde with Victoria's Secret looks and a thick Long Island accent, assembled in the form of Margot Robbie ("Pan Am") who gives her most memorable performance. DiCaprio really gets to let loose during Belfort's own "Greed is Good" speeches to try to motivate his brokers, and this is where having an open collaborator like Scorsese really gives the actor a chance to shine.

    While cocaine does play a part in the menagerie of drugs Jordan takes throughout the movie to stay on top of his game, quaaludes are given the center stage spotlight in a couple gut-busting scenes with Jonah Hill, whose portrayal of the WASPiest Jew ever portrayed on screen is an image that's hard to erase from your brain afterwards. The rest of the cast playing Jordan's cronies, particularly PJ Byrne and Jon Bernthal, also help bring the characters from Belfort's bio and Winter's words to life. By comparison, Matthew McConaughey's role is a fairly small one, really only appearing in one or two scenes near the beginning of the movie, but they're fairly memorable ones that have a huge impact on Belfort's later M.O. One of the more unconventional casting decisions that actually works brilliantly is Rob Reiner as Belfort's always-irate father, "Mad Max," a character who also appears in two scenes that are so funny you probably will wish to see more of him. There's a similarly welcome turn by Joanna Lumley of "Absolutely Fabulous."

    About halfway through the movie, just as some might start tiring of Belfort's excesses, the movie transitions into the FBI and SEC's investigation of Belfort's practices, which lead to some fun scenes between DiCaprio and Kyle Chandler that hark back to Leo's earlier movie "Catch Me If You Can." At that time, Belfort also starts taking his dealings international as he tries to hide his millions from the government in a Swiss account, managed by Jean Dujardin's sleazy bank manager.

    Incidentally, it's easy to see why Scorsese could very well have had issues with the MPAA on this one, because he rarely flinches when it comes to showing sex and nudity, of which there's a lot, making it a movie not for the easily-shocked.

    The only minor criticism one might have for the movie is that there's no real emotional core that makes the viewer feel empathy for Belfort's situation, but maybe that's a good thing. The same could very well have been said about Daniel Day-Lewis' character in "There Will Be Blood," but like that character, we're fascinated by every move Belfort makes. While we're fully aware that every one of his bad decisions will lead to future repercussions, he's another one of those film characters whose rise and fall is far too entertaining for us to condone even his worst behavior.

    The Bottom Line:
    Few will be surprised to see how well Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio shoehorn their collaborative relationship into a brilliantly witty take on the world of the stock market, although fewer will be expecting a film that's on par with Scorsese classics like "Goodfellas" and "Casino."



    Peter Travers :Rolling Stone 4 stars

    http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/r...#ixzz2nroFF2rN
    Pow. Pow. Pow. Pow. Pow. 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 fisky badboy. You probably hate that it runs three hours. Yeah, like we don't spend that much time every effing day exchanging banalities on digital media. This is Scorsese, people, delivering a cinematic landmark. Look closely and you might see your own venal fantasies in how these Wall Street scumbags spend their ill-gotten gains on drugs, hookers, cars, yachts and jets. Working with a gutsy script by The Sopranos' Terence Winter, Scor sese is jabbing hard at America's jackpot culture. The laughs are merciless and nonstop, every one with a sting in its tail.

    If that's too much for you, go watch The Sound of Music. Scorsese doesn't coddle. Wolf snarls and bites, but you won't forget for a second that you're in the hands of a master filmmaker. Once again, following Goodfellas and Casino, Scorsese has his eye on money and how it moves through society, top to bottom. The stock scammers of Wolf don't carry guns or run gambling dens. Greed is their bond, and they wear it like a second skin.

    Front and center is Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio), a New York broker with the talent to sell you nightmares disguised as dreams. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Belfort moved from hawking penny stocks in boiler rooms to founding Stratton Oakmont, a Long Island firm that ran the same hustle in a classier office. Belfort eventually did 22 months of jail time for his sins. But what sins! In his 2007 autobiography, the source for Winter's script, Belfort detailed excesses that would shame Roman emperors. Scorsese and camera whiz Rodrigo Prieto (Amores Perros) don't skimp on the decadence. Putting on the brakes is the problem for Belfort and his top wingman, Donnie Azoff (Jonah Hill starts at terrific and builds from there). For them, no time is wrong for an orgy or a new hustle. Quaaludes are the drug of choice for these masters of the universe. One scene, in which a 'luded-out Belfort drives home from a country club, is for-the-ages hilarious. And scary. That's the point.

    DiCaprio's swaggering, swinging-dick performance is the wildest damn thing he's ever put onscreen. Whether he's lying to his trophy wife, Naomi (Aussie actress Margot Robbie in a star-making role), breaking frame to talk to the camera or rallying his troops like a hopped-up Braveheart, DiCaprio is a marvel. Wolf is his fifth film with Scorsese, and they're still daring each other, still pushing the limits.

    Criterioncast:
    http://www.criterioncast.com/reviews...trical-review/
    As long as there’s been a cinema, there’s been the issue of how to portray the lifestyles of the rich and criminal. Too glamorous, you risk ignoring the horror of the things they’ve done. Too repulsive and you overlook the allure that drew the characters into this line of work. Martin Scorsese is more than familiar with this schism, not only as a huge consumer of the cinema himself, but as the filmmaker behind Goodfellas, Casino, Mean Streets, and The Departed. The man knows how to make criminal activity look downright awesome, so much so that he’s often accused of glorifying violence (a charge that says more about the complainant than the defendant, if you ask me). Such charges, however, overlook the gruesomeness with which Scorsese renders such scenarios, how he recognizes that psychological charge than accompanies such acts alongside the terrible damage, physically and psychologically. With The Wolf of Wall Street, I wonder if even his critics will be able to make their case.

    We’re introduced to Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) as a philandering, drug-addicted narcissist whose pure desire to obtain wealth blinds him to all else, including the very source of that money. It’s been said that it’s easy to make money, so long as all you want to do is make money. And boy, does Jordan want to make money. It takes a little while to find that his empire is built almost entirely on defrauding middle-class people with penny stocks that have no viable future. It’s pretty easy to tell that even for Wall Street, Jordan is a man of very low character. Gordon Gekko’s “greed is good” speech was famously distorted by an entire generation of power-hungry cretins eager to lend moral legitimacy to their capitalistic pursuits, but when Jordan says, in voiceover, that “Money doesn’t just buy you a better life…it also makes you a better person,” it’s a laugh line, impossible to accept seriously. “You can save the fucking spotted owl with money,” he concludes. Beyond DiCaprio’s arch delivery, though, the words themselves reveal the lie – you can save the spotted owl, but money doesn’t make you anything. Other than rich.


    The proceeding three hours show everything you can do with money, should you decide that the owl isn’t to your taste. There’s the usual effects, from the common – the big house, the nice car, the boat, the beautiful wife – to the debased – the drugs, the hookers (who Jordan claims to see five times per week), the gambling – to the truly warped – the way in which Jordan exerts power over anyone in his path. Nowhere is it demonstrated that money made Jordan a better person. What little glimpse we get into his relatively uncorrupted life, via his first day on Wall Street, indicates, if not a purely altruistic point of view, then certainly one who recognizes the value of collective interests. His opinion on this matter is reversed almost instantly. Jordan isn’t an innovator, an entrepreneur, a visionary; he’s not even a businessman. He’s a vessel of capitalism, the purest distillation of everything that the system encourages and even mandates – to make as much money as you can, however you can, and to spend it as lavishly as you can. Any talk of “motivation” becomes fruitless. “Ever since I was young, I wanted to be rich,” he says, recounting a familiar refrain from another Scorsese film. And that’s all there is to it.

    DiCaprio, as has come to be expected for this viewer, is really outstanding, driving nearly every scene of the film with an energy that’s at once wildly manic and intensely focused, not an inappropriate decision for a character who’s almost always high. He has always reflected, or even defined, the atmosphere of his collaborations with Scorsese (the stoic complacency of The Gangs of New York, the angular muscularity of The Departed, the storm of repressed emotions escaping the seams of his exterior in Shutter Island), but never quite to the extent that the actor and director have collided here. He meets Scorsese’s indulgent-yet-questioning atmosphere with a vision of Jordan’s bravado that’s totally confident without once undermining the complete absurdity of it all. At one point, he’s arguing with his wife, Naomi (Margot Robbie, meeting screenwriter Terence Winter’s description of someone “incredibly, painfully hot,” and doing some great character work along the way), while shirtless, and she takes him to task for flexing his muscles in the midst of it. “You’re just lucky to have a husband who’s in such great shape,” he replies, in a medium shot that indicates to the audience that we have, in fact, seen DiCaprio in much better shape before. I don’t know that he specifically molded himself for the role, but there’s a casual abandon of vanity in that moment that speaks to his performance as a whole. His discovery of cocaine, suggested to be in the midst of a late-night bender, is suddenly revealed to be the middle of a suburban afternoon. For all the ways in which Jordan positions himself to be the Most Awesome Man Alive, Scorsese and DiCaprio rarely let him appear that way, always finding a way to undermine his sexuality and charisma, never denying what both get for him, but suggesting to varying degrees the extremely unpleasant traits that really drive him.



    I’m actually kind of shocked that such a film came out of Scorsese, who so thoroughly wrings the humanity from even his most despicable subjects. It’s not to say Jordan is entirely bereft of this, but he is in incredibly short supply. In this regard most especially, beyond the energy of the thing and its largely comic tone, the film is most closely tied to Goodfellas, which ended, essentially, with a homicidal maniac shuffled off into witness protection having learned only that it really sucks to get caught. But even that film didn’t push that tone nearly so far; nearly every second of this film is infused with that narcissistic pettiness, ramped up well past 11 in an unending parade of dancing girls, flying midgets, racism, sexism, a dozen near-death experiences, perverse sexual acts, the most insane drug sequence I think I’ve ever seen, and an entire ensemble perfectly tuned into this larger-than-life assault. It’s easy for guys like DiCaprio and Matthew McConaughey to temporarily abandon their hunk status; quite another for Jonah Hill to do the same, and go further in so doing. When Hill meets Naomi, his comment “I would let her give me AIDS” is actually the most civilized response he has, if that’s any indication. This is Scorsese at his most disgusted, outraged, and bewildered; as with Michael Bay’s Pain & Gain, he shows the characters at once as they are and as they see themselves, the endless comedic effect.

    Jordan’s eventual comeuppance is about as effective a punishment as Henry Hill’s experience, but the moral implications for the audience are undeniable. Near the beginning, Jordan introduces money as the most potent drug of all; by the end, it’s corroded his life more thoroughly than anything else. Not in the usual passed-out-in-the-gutter way, sure, but look into his eyes. Look at who surrounds him, and why. Look who no longer does. Look at how his privilege makes him feel he can treat people. And ask yourself – is this who you want to be? If so, boy, does he have a seminar for you.

    Nordling of AICN reviews Wolf:
    www.aintitcool.com/node/65486
    In THE WOLF OF WALL STREET, Martin Scorsese doesn't pretend to be morally outraged at the excess and depravity of his film's subjects. He's not. We're well past that stage now. What good would moral outrage do? You may as well be angry at a cheetah chasing down a gazelle. The cheetah's just doing what it does. And the predators of THE WOLF OF WALL STREET are all too real, and beyond any kind of moral judgment that the best you can hope for is to document each disgusting act, and hope something sticks. Even if you try to inject some kind of judgment, it would fall upon deaf ears. No, if there's a moral to THE WOLF OF WALL STREET, it's simply this: you don't have to be a cheetah, but for fuck's sake, don't be a gazelle.

    It also helps the message go down a lot more smoothly that THE WOLF OF WALL STREET is the funniest movie Scorsese has ever made. You even find yourself rooting for, in a fashion, the schemes and machinations of Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) as he rises from the middle-class to true wealth and power, bringing friends like Donnie Azoff (the tremendously terrific Jonah Hill) and Brad Bodnick (the also great Jon Bernthal) along for the ride. Never mind people like FBI agent Patrick Denham (Kyle Chandler) - they're petty nuisances, mere distractions.

    Belfort has drive, ambition, even a willingness to work, but once he's set on the money path by Mark Hanna (Matthew McConaughey in a wonderful five minute scene that rivals Alec Baldwin's "Always Be Closing" speech in GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS), there's no going back. Belfort discovers that he can make 50% commission on penny stocks, and with a bit of swagger and showmanship, Belfort forms his company Stratton Oakmont to take from the rich and make himself richer. Stocks rise, and stocks fall, Belfort and his friends get increasingly more loaded on all variety of drugs, and sexual debauchery, and who's hurt by all this anyway?

    Terence Winter's biting, funny script looks at this den of thieves with a mixture of scorn and admiration - and truth be told, it's more admiration than scorn. When these characters do behave badly, Scorsese and Winter fool us into sympathizing with them a little bit. After all, who would turn down such opportunities? THE WOLF OF WALL STREET doesn't suggest that we all would be susceptible; no, it downright insists on it. Belfort and his cohorts never see the consequences of what they do - the thousands of jobs lost at the companies they destroy, or the destabilization of an already weak economy. And, even after jail time, they still walk away rich. This is a lesson they never learn. And, really, what's to learn?

    Jordan Belfort may be an asshole, but he's no dummy - he can size people up instantly and assess their vulnerabilities and strengths. He sees real strength in Donnie Azoff, and Jonah Hill's performance is revelatory. Azoff is also a man eager to shed his morality for money, but Azoff also has a sense of loyalty to Jordan that's endearing, even when that loyalty takes Azoff places he never expected to go in his life. In Jordan Belfort's world, women are simply window dressing. It wasn't always that way; his first wife Teresa (Cristin Milioti) truly loved Jordan until his vices got away from him, and second wife Naomi (Margot Robbie) was as beautiful as she was vacant. For Jordan, everything is negotiable, and nothing is without a price.

    I get the feeling, having not read the book, that Scorsese and Winter look right into the heart of Belfort and see his true nature. They never go out of their way to make him a hero, and let his actions define him. It also helps that Leonardo DiCaprio is at his career best here. There's no moment of redemption for him, no regret for the life he's led. Like Henry Hill at the end of GOODFELLAS, his only regret is that he got caught. DiCaprio fills Belfort with disdain, and yet such eagerness and ambition that it's only natural to root for him even at his most despicable.

    DiCaprio also has the single best physical comedy moment since Steve Martin tried walking across the street with Lily Tomlin's soul attached in ALL OF ME. I can't even set the scene well enough without fear of spoiling, but I will say this - the drug humor in THE WOLF OF WALL STREET is some of the funniest since Cheech and Chong, and it feels only natural that Martin Scorsese tells this particular story considering his way of life in the late 1970s - early 1980s. This is, by the way, the hardest R rated movie Scorsese's ever made. He doesn't pull any punches, as well he shouldn't; there is no such thing as too much of a good thing in Jordan Belfort's world, and Scorsese remembers that great truth that is natural to all crime films - in the long run crime may not pay, but at first? Hell yes it does.

    THE WOLF OF WALL STREET is anything but dour. Martin Scorsese has made one of the most flat-out entertaining movies of his career, masterfully edited by Thelma Schoonmaker. There is never a dull moment, and Scorsese keeps up the relentless energy throughout the entire three hours. Most filmmakers attach their own sense of moral scruples to any excess that they document, but Scorsese knows the real score. Our personal ideals and sense of righteousness cannot hope to survive the flood of money and power that Jordan Belfort gets during his time on Wall Street. We can look upon him with judgment, knowing full well that we wouldn't hesitate for one second to do the same if those opportunities came our way. Scorsese isn't judging Jordan Belfort. He can't. And, really, we can't either.

    Because in the end, we'd happily join Jordan Belfort on his fantastic ride if we could. This is 'Merica, ain't it?

    UK Independent :
    http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-en...e-9011385.html
    The Wolf of Wall Street, film review: 'A lurid, profanity bespattered movie'


    After his foray into kids’ movie fantasy in Hugo (2011), Martin Scorsese is back with a lurid, profanity bespattered film that is very much for adults only – and may even take some of them aback. The Wolf of Wall Street, which had its premiere in America on Tuesday night, opens with scenes of dwarf throwing at an office party. From there, it’s quickly on to the hookers, naked marching bands and the booze, cocaine and Quaalude binges.


    Based on disgraced stockbroker Jordan Belfort’s self-serving and utterly unapologetic memoir, this is a contemporary rake’s progress. It boasts an outstanding performance from Leonardo DiCaprio, who is both master of ceremonies (often speaking directly to camera or narrating his own life in a Goodfellas-style voice-over) and, inevitably, the movie’s biggest fall guy. DiCaprio’s achievement is to give an emotional depth to a character who is so sleazy and so superficial.

    The title may suggest that we’re back in the world of Gordon Gekko and Bonfire of the Vanities. That isn’t actually the case. Apart from some early scenes, in which young Jordan is taken in hand by his engagingly amoral boss Mark Hanna (Matthew McConaughey), very little of the film is set on Wall Street. Most of the action unfolds in the non-descript part of Long Island where Belfort sets up his “pump and dump” brokerage Stratton Oakmont.

    Belfort’s recruits aren’t Wasp bankers. They’re down-at-heel blue-collar types who, like Belfort himself, relish the chance to live their own twisted version of the American Dream. Belfort’s second in command, the slobbish, belligerent Donnie Azoff (Jonah Hill), epitomises the company ethos. In one scene, Donnie reprimands an employee by swallowing the man’s goldfish.

    The screenplay by Terence Winter (one of the creators of Boardwalk Empire) isn’t remotely interested in the plight of the small-time investors who lost their life savings because of Stratton Oakmont. Scorsese is observing, not preaching. As he shows, earning huge amounts has a transformative, Jekyll and Hyde-like effect on Belfort’s employees. Belfort describes the process of making cash quickly as being like “mainlining adrenaline.” His wife’s aunt (an Ab Fab-style cameo from Joanna Lumley) tells him, perceptively, that money is getting the better of him…among “other substances”.

    With its prowling camera work, R&B music, stylised slow-motion sequences, expletive-filled dialogue and highly inventive use of voice-over, The Wolf of Wall Street is directed with all the vim and vigour you would expect from Scorsese. The humour here is often very bawdy indeed – you get the sense that Scorsese prepared for the film by boning up on Porky’s, Animal House and Roy “Chubby” Brown videos. It’s refreshing, if a little surprising, to see such a distinguished director taking such a crude and irreverent approach.

    Gradually, it dawns on you that the protagonists here aren’t big-time gangsters. They’re white-collar office workers who sell stocks over the phone. You can only glamorise such characters so far. Their infantile behaviour is made painfully obvious in one of the film’s very best sequences, in which Belfort is reduced to crawling like a baby after popping too many Quaaludes.

    DiCaprio captures brilliantly the pathetic, self-delusional side of the character as well as his flamboyance.

    Review by Jeffrey Wells
    http://www.hollywood-elsewhere.com/2013/12/39553/
    Some insist that social-malaise films have to follow the form. A movie about drug addiction can’t show how heroin can make you feel like Jesus’s son — it can only portray the danger and degradation and the third-act decision to clean up. If you’re making an anti-war flick you can show the horror and the cruelty but never the tingly euphoria that soldiers sometimes get from combat. If you’re dramatizing political corruption you can’t show how being neck-deep in smooth payoffs and kickbacks can feel almost euphoric. And if you’re making a movie about Wall Street insanity, you have to be earnest and solemn and show what a terrible thing it is to steal other people’s money. You certainly can’t take your paintbrush and do a mad slash across the canvas and go “yeahhh! It sucks to lie and steal millions, but our scumbag characters loved it!…it was the best time of their lives, and they’d do it again if they could figure a way not to get caught and do time! Of course!”

    Martin Scorsese‘s The Wolf of Wall Street (Paramount, 12.25) is, of course, saying quite clearly that Jordan Belfort and his Stratton Oakmont partners and most of his employees are fecal matter. But it says this with a double-edged sword, and this strategy has made some viewers feel perplexed. They want the kind of moral clarity that they’re used to, that films like Wall Street and Boiler Room have previously supplied. They don’t want a cranked-up mix-mash.

    Scorsese, screenwriter Terrence Winter, star-producer Leonardo DiCaprio and costars Jonah Hill, Rob Reiner and all the rest are conveying the “right” moral lessons. I realized instantly that The Wolf of Wall Street is in no way cheering venality. But you have to accept Scorsese’s way of doing things, and that means there can’t be a morose Martin Sheen character coming in during Act Three and saying to DiCaprio’s Belfort, “Jordan, do you have any idea how much pain you’ve caused all those buyers of this worthless penny stocks? My unmarried niece is struggling to pay her rent this month, and she has three kids to feed.”

    In a 12.17 Vanity Fair essay, Katey Rich hit the bull’s eye when she said that movies “have always indulged in bad-but-thrilling behavior and gotten away with it by promising redemption or contrition in the end. But Scorsese, returning to his familiar realm of men behaving badly, isn’t interested in either side of that moral equation. In real life, a group of Wall Streeters probably not so different from Jordan Belfort wrecked a lot more than a boat, and barely had to apologize.

    “The Wolf of Wall Street allows us to feel what it was like to be those guys — the wild rush of drugs, the insane power brought by money — and to not feel that bad about enjoying it. Instead of indulging in all the bad behavior before about-facing for redemption in the end, Scorsese puts the celebration and the revulsion side by side. He uses 40 years of cinematic experience to judge Belfort and company more harshly than the world ever did.”

    In other words — this is the really perverse part — a good portion of The Wolf of Wall Street feels like a orgy you wouldn’t mind attending. (Especially if you could do it secretly.) As deplorable and cruel and outrageous as much the behavior seems, it’s also a repulsive hoot. If, that is, you can disengage and allow your inner asshole free reign. Which is a way of saying (and I don’t like admitting this) “I remember.” Didn’t Federico Fellini make a movie with that title?

    Another way of putting it: The Wolf of Wall Street makes a moral point while being crazy enough to recall what truly serious foolishness and stupidity and socially irresponsibilty were all about. It takes you back to your carousing days when you didn’t care what end of the candle was burning.

    As I noted on 12.13, “It allows you to laugh uproariously at the dumb (and perhaps reprehensible) things you did and have probably forgotten about, and then sets you free when it’s over. And yet for older, stodgier types who never went there in their teens or 20s or did and are determined to keep those memories in a locked box (or for those who can’t handle the crude sexual exploitation of women, which has always been a nocturnal characteristic of arrogant Wall Street types), Wolf is going to be seen as an ugly three-hour romp and nothing more. It’s not judgmental enough, Belfort is too much of a prick, what’s the point of this? and so on.

    “This is why I’m calling The Wolf of Wall Street the new Scarface. It has so far been shat upon in certain quarters by the same kind of harumphy industry crowd that despised Brian DePalma‘s 1983 crime pic. And just as Scarface eventually became a cult flick (especially among ‘urban’ rapper/hip-hop types who idolized gangsta culture and the swagger of Al Pacino‘s Tony Montana) it’s probably going to be embraced by (a) present-day party animals and by (b) 40- and 50-somethings those who remember their druggy days and want to enjoy them once again by proxy.

    “This is why The Wolf of Wall Street is the only truly bold and nervy film in the Best Picture circle right now. It’s both appalling and gutsy as hell — a wild-ass moralistic ‘comedy.’”

    Review by Scott Mendelson, Forbes:
    http://www.forbes.com/sites/scottmen...-day-caligula/
    It would be overly dismissive to merely say that The Wolf of Wall Street is merely the Goodfellas/Casino formula poured into a different glass, but fans of Scorsese’s organized crime epics will find much of the overall structure and arc of this newest picture perhaps a little too familiar. It has little to say about the events it depicts, obviously viewing the participants with contempt but refraining from casting explicit judgment or drawing any larger conclusions. Nonetheless, it remains completely entertaining and endlessly amusing, with fine performances from a game cast and an energy that allows viewers to overlook the somewhat thin narrative at play. It may or may not be a great film, but much of The Wolf of Wall Street surely qualifies as a great movie.

    It’s no secret that the picture, which charts the rise and fall of stock trader Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) during the late 80′s/early 90′s, runs nearly three hours. Like Casino, the film’s three acts are explicitly divided and you’ll surely have a favorite portion. Me? I’m partial to the “here’s how everything works” introductory sections, which are alive with discovery through the eyes of novice salespeople learning to be expert stock traders in a somewhat under-the-table fashion. Once a kind of success arrives, the film becomes what amounts to a non-stop barrage of wanton sexuality and vulgarity that just barely avoids becoming repetitious.

    That it doesn’t is due to the strength of Scorsese’s relentless direction, which seems to make the entire film a shot across the bow to an entire generation of filmmakers who grew up emulating his prior masterworks. Thelma Schoonmaker’s editing creates a constant sense of urgency while game performances by DiCaprio, Jonah Hill, and Joanna Lumley keeps us in the moment. If the picture is a bit thematically thin, it is indeed quite a bit of naughty fun.

    The picture does get some mileage out of the notion of how obvious scoundrels still see themselves as morally upstanding, such an amusing moment when DiCaprio is horrified to discover that he dropped the “n-word” in drugged stupor. But otherwise it’s basically a gigantic guilty pleasure, where the anti-hero pays a comeuppance but certainly has plenty of fun until he does. While not the fault of the filmmakers, I genuinely fear an entire generation of young would-be financial gurus seeing this film as their Scarface, reveling in the wish-fulfillment excess while dismissing any and all social commentary or moral condemnation.

    The Wolf of Wall Street is a genuine cinematic pleasure, a high-energy comedy of societal horrors contained within a somewhat formulaic narrative. There is great fun to be had with what is basically a great party of a movie, a condemnation that nonetheless allows us to enjoy and/or celebrate the debauchery and moral outrage on display. I don’t think the film has all that much to say beyond merely telling its story. But it tells that story with relative success, dragging only a little towards the end with the redundant explicit (relative) destruction of its anti-hero.

    The picture is a fine conclusion to an unofficial trilogy of organized criminality, and shows DiCaprio and Scorsese in mutually beneficial fine form. It can be debated whether, from a thematic point-of-view, The Wolf of Wall Street is art. But it is surely peerless craft from a genuine master on top of his game. It may be a guilty pleasure, but it is still a true pleasure


    'The Wolf of Wall Street' Is a Douchebag's Handbook
    by Esther Zuckerman:

    http://www.thewire.com/entertainment...ndbook/356242/
    The Wolf of Wall Street is a well-acted, well-directed, well-written film. It also will be idolized for all the wrong reasons.

    Martin Scorsese's latest film is the tale of Jordan Belfort, played by Leonardo DiCaprio (who also produces), a Wall Street stock bro who lived a life of absurd, unearthly pleasures as he stole from the rich and gave to himself on the unregulated stock market. A description of the movie reads like a Stefon sketch from Saturday Night Live. It has everything: flying little people, a candlestick in a man's ass, cocaine in a woman's ass, Rob Reiner.

    In the relative onslaught of raves (90% on Rotten Tomatoes), there's a sense among the critics that Scorsese manages to depict this monstrous behavior while also implicitly condemning it. At Vanity Fair, Katey Rich says, "Instead of indulging in all the bad behavior before about-facing for redemption in the end, Scorsese puts the celebration and the revulsion side by side. He uses 40 years of cinematic experience to judge Belfort and company more harshly than the world ever did." At Awards Daily, Oscar blogger Sasha Stone calls the film a "blatant indictment of the vomitous ruin that has laid waste" to this country, en route to proclaiming it the best film of the year.

    Call me a prude, but I had a hard time seeing any indictment of Belfort's lifestyle and boiler room culture in the movie. Sure, anyone can see that the stuff that Belfort and his pals do is bad, but the movie—and in turn Scorsese, DiCaprio and writer Terence Winter—relish in its badness. They hand the movie over to Belfort completely, allowing his voiceover to run the show. That means we see everything through Belfort's eyes, and, according to Belfort, what he did in his hedonistic days at Stratton Oakmont was pretty damn cool and fairly consequence-free.

    Jordan sleeps with a bevy of prostitutes at his bachelor party, but he gets a penicillin shot and is fine to consummate his second marriage. Jordan crashes his helicopter in his yard but manages to just ruin some grass. Jordan drives his Ferrari high off his mind on quaaludes, but gets home fine and at least doesn't kill anyone. Jordan spends years swindling people, gets a reduced sentence for ratting out his colleagues, and ends up a motivational speaker. It's all played for laughs.

    For as much as you could say that by revealing the monstrous truth of Belfort's amoral life Scorsese is laying it bare for condemnation, the truth is that his camera lingers on the debauchery. Throughout the course of the three-hour movie, all the scenes of ridiculous drinking, drunks and sex seem to run together. Women parade around planes, offices, hotel rooms stark—really, really stark—naked, there only to be fucked by the men. The men fuck with abandon in front of anyone watching. In one unforgettable scene, Donnie, Belfort's colleague and friend played by Jonah Hill, is high on quaaludes (and probably more) and masturbating at a party while looking at the woman that would later become Jordan's wife. (Contrast this with a barely-there Kyle Chandler, whose FBI agent might normally be the moral center of the movie, if it had one.)

    There is the case to be made, and it will certainly be made, that there is implicit commentary in Wolf. That's surely the tone the filmmakers took in a press conference this Saturday. "I felt like his biography was a reflection of everything that's wrong in today's society," DiCaprio said, explaining why he was champion the material. (DiCaprio, it's worth noting, has shilled for the real life Belfort's latter day reinvention as a motivational speaker.) But watching the film you can practically hear the filmmakers whispering the odd "awesome" or at least "Holy shit, I can't believe he did that and is still alive!"

    And viewers seem to be having the same reaction. Case in point: the Daily Beast's Marlow Stern has compiled a list of the "craziest" moments from the movie. Or the fact that Xan Brooks' review from The Guardian concludes that "[Scorsese] gives us a film that is polished and punchy, chock-full of beans and throwing out sparks. He's enjoying himself and the fun is infectious." Chock full of beans! It sounds so cute! Like a a carefree child playing with an adorable bag of coke. Todd McCarthy at The Hollywood Reporter says that the movie is "often madly entertaining due to its live-wire energy, exuberant performances and the irresistible appeal of watching naughty boys doing very naughty things."

    Meanwhile, at Hollywood Elsewhere, Jeffrey Wells likens the movie to Brian de Palma's Scarface, and argues that those that criticize it are "harumphy." He writes:

    "And yet for older, stodgier types who never went there in their teens or 20s or did and are determined to keep those memories in a locked box (or for those who can’t handle the crude sexual exploitation of women, which has always been a nocturnal characteristic of arrogant Wall Street types), Wolf is going to be seen as an ugly three-hour romp and nothing more. It’s not judgmental enough, Belfort is too much of a prick, what’s the point of this? and so on."

    The frustrating part is that the movie doesn't really need Wells's defense, since it certainly has respect amongst many critics. (Well, maybe not David Denby of the New Yorker.) Wells's piece reads not as an explanation of why he believes the movie is "mostly moral," but a justification of those that are going to love it for its drugged up pleasures and nothing more. It's a free pass that paints all detractors as fun-killing scolds.

    And maybe that's my main problem with Wolf. I was put off by a movie that should be off-putting, but only because I felt that the filmmakers weren't put off enough. Scorsese and DiCaprio want to have their cake and eat it too. They want to make a movie that says something, but also revel in the fucked-up-ness of the world they supposedly feel negatively about. That's not to say the movie should overtly slap its hero on the wrist in ways the real life story does not, but the movie is carelessly handed over to Jordan's perspective, and I'm not sure Jordan or the filmmakers think he's such bad a guy at heart.

    I guess, at the tender age of 23, I'm just an old fogey, but Wolf left me feeling sick to my stomach, and not because the movie condemned Belfort's world, but because it seemed to love it.
    Última edición por horner; 19/12/2013 a las 20:33
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  10. #285
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    ...me encantaria visitar NYork...




    ....y Las Vegas, San Francisco, El Gran Canyon de Colorado,......

    ....seguiremos soñando, hasta entonces
    Última edición por horner; 23/12/2013 a las 12:03
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  11. #286
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    BSO completa para escuchar online de manera gratuita:

    http://www.paramountguilds.com/the-w...url=soundtrack
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  12. #287
    Bibliotecario cinéfilo Avatar de Tripley
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Cita Iniciado por rohmerin Ver mensaje
    Scorsese suele tener caemos a la Hitchcock. En After hours es un técnico de luces, vamos, que dirige un foco en el pub Berlín. En Gangs of NY hacía de rico al que robaba en su casa. ¿Sale en todas, todas?

    ¿Cuándo se estrena en España? Es para ir mirando billetes para Madrid + hotel (a no ser que un golfo lector me hospede : - )
    Yo recuerdo otros dos cameros de Scorsese:

    · La edad de la inocencia: es un fotógrafo haciendo una fotografía (más bien un daguerrotipo)
    · La invención de Hugo: es otro fotógrafo haciendo una foto durante la inaguración del estudio de Méliès

    Se ve que le gustan los cameos "cinematográficos". Si buscamos en IMDb salen todos: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000217/#actor

    Saludos
    Última edición por Tripley; 20/12/2013 a las 02:04
    Marty_McFly, tomaszapa, Campanilla y 2 usuarios han agradecido esto.
    Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
    007: "You must be joking"
    _______________________

    CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"

    _______________________

    EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"

  13. #288
    The Clairvoyant Avatar de Fincher
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    ¿Hay notícias del score de Shore? A estas alturas ya debería haberse escuchado algo suyo.
    Tripley ha agradecido esto.

  14. #289
    Bibliotecario cinéfilo Avatar de Tripley
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Cita Iniciado por horner Ver mensaje
    BSO completa para escuchar online de manera gratuita:

    http://www.paramountguilds.com/the-w...url=soundtrack
    Guau, hay una versión de Goldfinger (aunque he de decir que me gusta más la original)

    Saludos
    Última edición por Tripley; 20/12/2013 a las 18:13
    Fincher y jonathansv han agradecido esto.
    Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
    007: "You must be joking"
    _______________________

    CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"

    _______________________

    EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"

  15. #290
    Bibliotecario cinéfilo Avatar de Tripley
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Cita Iniciado por Fincher Ver mensaje
    ¿Hay notícias del score de Shore? A estas alturas ya debería haberse escuchado algo suyo.
    Yo no he visto o leído nada en las páginas de scores que suelo consultar o en la página de Howard Shore. Esperemos que salga editado. Saludos
    horner y Fincher han agradecido esto.
    Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
    007: "You must be joking"
    _______________________

    CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"

    _______________________

    EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"

  16. #291
    The Clairvoyant Avatar de Fincher
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Es que temo que se haya quedado en nada a favor de las canciones; que otras cómo Casino o Shutter Island tenían grandes temas, no sólo canciones.
    Tripley y horner han agradecido esto.

  17. #292
    gurú Avatar de Dr.Gonzo
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Pues yo prefiero mil veces más una banda sonora de canciones a una original. Me dan mucha pereza y, en la mayoría de las ocasiones, siempre me suenan igual.
    Hay composiciones muy concretas que me gustan, pero nunca me pondría el disco entero de una banda sonora de música orquestada. Prefiero el rollo Tarantino

  18. #293
    The Clairvoyant Avatar de Fincher
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Es que aunque esa práctica la haya puesto de moda Tarantino, el amigo Scorsese llevaba años haciéndola.
    Eso sí, quedando más uniforme y menos pastiche.
    horner ha agradecido esto.

  19. #294
    Senior Member Avatar de tomaszapa
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Cita Iniciado por Marty_McFly Ver mensaje
    Estás confundido, tomaszapa. En Taxi Driver Scorsese no tiene un cameo, sino un pequeño papel. Es el cliente que lleva el taxi a su calle y le cuenta a DeNiro que su mujer se está zumbando a otro, y que planea matarlos.
    No me has perdonado lo de la capa, HP! Se ve que me la tenias guardada, mala persona!

    Marty, ésta está mejor

    Última edición por tomaszapa; 20/12/2013 a las 16:48

  20. #295
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Otro poster, diferente y original...



    Otra imagen....



    Otro Spot TV...

    tomaszapa, Campanilla, Tripley y 3 usuarios han agradecido esto.

  21. #296
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Nuevo clip:
    (tambien otro de "American Hustle", aunque entiendo que ya estara colgado en su hilo correspondiente)

    http://collider.com/wolf-of-wall-str...n-hustle-clip/



    Jonah Hill en "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart": (nueva secuencia incluida)
    http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/th...013/jonah-hill
    Última edición por horner; 20/12/2013 a las 19:40
    Fincher ha agradecido esto.

  22. #297
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Entrevista a Jordan Belfort en la CNN:

    http://ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-1059811
    Fincher ha agradecido esto.

  23. #298
    The Resistance Avatar de sammas 1.0
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Clips
















    tomaszapa, Derek Vinyard, horner y 1 usuarios han agradecido esto.

  24. #299
    Somebody wake up Hicks Avatar de horner
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)






    Casi una hora de entrevista....¡¡¡¡¡¡genial!!!!!
    A look at the film “The Wolf of Wall Street” with Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio.
    http://www.charlierose.com/watch/60318162
    tomaszapa y Fincher han agradecido esto.

  25. #300
    Senior Member Avatar de tomaszapa
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    Predeterminado Re: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013)

    Ya veréis que, pese a todo el buen material (entrevistas y demás) que hay sobre la peli y que ha ido recopilando pacientemente el amigo horner, son capaces de incluir unos extras miserables como acompanñamiento en el BD. Firmo para que horner se encargue del material
    Tripley, horner y Fincher han agradecido esto.

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