Showing posts with label jonah hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jonah hill. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

The Wolf of Wall Street Review

Mr Scorsese, why are you making me laugh at this? The Wolf of Wall Street is a not very cautionary tale of disgusting greed, loathsome behaviour and the many perks of being a white collar criminal. It is excess all areas; vast quantities of drugs are consumed, prostitutes are used and abused and cash flows quickly into the pockets of our real-life anti-hero Jordan Belfort. It should be repugnant. It is repugnant. But against my better judgement, it is also hysterically funny; a pitch black comedy that you might not want to laugh at but you probably will.

Jordan Belfort is the Wolf of Wall Street. As a newly married young man, he moves to New York to work on stocks and make his fortune. After losing his job in the big crash of 1987, Belfort starts his own firm, trading in penny stocks and convincing people dumber than him to invest in shares that he knows will never go anywhere. He soon works his way up, partnering with Donnie Azoff and taking on the big boys of Wall Street with his illegal, immoral and irresponsible firm Stratton Oakmont. As he 'earns' ridiculous amounts of money by ripping people off, he also develops an unquenchable thirst for every drug under the sun and using prostitutes becomes another favourite pastime. It is the rise and fall of a white collar gangster; perhaps not as violent as Henry Hill but equally if not more destructive, decadent and disgusting. He may not murder people, but Belfort ruins plenty of lives.


It's hard to focus on the victims of Belfort's story as we never get the chance to see them. We never meet those who lose their money and we never see the consequences of his actions for the people involved. Belfort, as played by Leonardo DiCaprio is, takes us along for his ride. We see events as he sees them and nothing is going to kill his buzz except maybe the intrusion of the FBI. From the vile language of his first experience on Wall Street through to the head shaving of women for cold hard cash, throwing of little people on to office targets and the stag party to end all stag parties, Belfort is surrounded by decadence and moral decay. DiCaprio talks us through it all with a voice over and direct to camera address; sweeping you along for the ride with a smile and wink and rarely giving you a moment to think about those less fortunate than Belfort in all of this.

Scorsese does not hold back from showing any of the debauchery; the language, the sex, the occasional violence and most of all the drugs. The Wolf of Wall Street has the most swear words in one feature film in history. It has enough cocaine to make Scarface blush. And when Belfort and Azoff get hold of some super powerful Lemmon Quaaludes, it has one of the funniest drug taking scenes in cinema history as Belfort loses all control of his body. This scene pretty much sums up the film. It is absolutely hysterical. Belfort's excess leads to DiCaprio delivering a comedy masterclass as he crawls his way to his car under the influence. It is only when he gets to the car and begins driving that you realise what a selfish, dangerous, immoral guy you are watching. The consequences of his actions could have been fatal but still you laugh until tears come out.


The Wolf of Wall Street wallows in the behaviour of utter scumbags. Scorsese enjoys their company and makes us enjoy it too. It may be a rise and fall story but there is no real fall here. Belfort gets off far too easily and Scorsese reminds us in a striking final shot that we are all still watching Belfort; giving him our money gladly and lapping up his every word. The Wolf of Wall Street will leave you in a moral vacuum. I heard people leaving the cinema saying they wanted Belfort's life. Scorsese shows it how it was. Despite everything, it looks like fun and he pretty much got away with it. Belfort is undoubtedly a scumbag but with Scorsese and DiCaprio at his back, he is an eminently watchable scumbag.

Though the film is a little long, occasionally allowing some scenes (particularly some moments of improvisation) to slow the pace, it also gives plenty of chance for the stars to shine. Matthew McConaughey, Jonah Hill, Joanna Lumley and Jean Dujardin all get to show off their comic chops with Hill being particularly committed to bringing Donnie Azoff to hideous life. Backed by Terence Winter's snappy screenplay and Scorsese's smart direction, the larger than life characters all leave an impact, no matter how small their role in the three hour, event packed film.


The Wolf of Wall Street is Scorsese's best since Goodfellas. BUT it is also a disgrace. It makes you forget just what a complete shit Belfort really is. It is not angry enough. Belfort gets off easily. He turns on everyone around him, gets away with a tiny prison sentence in a white collar prison and is still not paying nearly enough back to his victims. To have Belfort appear in the film is just another slap in the face for the forgotten victims of the story. Scorsese has made a fun film about a man who deserves nothing but disdain. There is little caution in this 'cautionary' tale. We need to stop paying to listen to Belfort but with a film like this, Scorsese makes that very difficult.

More reviews at I Love That Film:

Out of the Furnace

Philomena

Dallas Buyers Club

12 Years A Slave

American Hustle

All is Lost

The Railway Man

Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom

Captain Phillips

Saving Mr. Banks

Sunday, 16 June 2013

The Wolf of Wall Street Trailer

Here is the brand new trailer for Scorsese's latest The Wolf of Wall Street starring one of my favourite casts of the year including no less than... Leo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill, Matthew McConaughey, Jean Dujardin, Jon Favreau, Ethan Suplee, Spike Jonze, Rob Reiner and Joanna Lumley. If that isn't exciting enough, then just watch the trailer below!



It's based on the memoir of Jordan Belfort, a New York stockbroker who was convicted of stock market manipulation and selling dodgy investments and therefore making millions. Sounds potentially dry but no doubt with Leo as Belfort and Scorsese at the helm this will be more than white collar whining or just another Wall Street.

What do you think of the trailer?

More trailers at I Love That Film:

The Wolverine

Pacific Rim

Man of Steel and The Desolation of Smaug

Wednesday, 5 June 2013

This is the End Review

This is the End should be completely self-indulgent twaddle. The kind of movie that could be the end of careers and make you hate the stars who so self-consciously play themselves in an attempt to be hip, clever and funny. Full of quirky cameos of the friends of the stars and showing the lifestyles of the rich and famous, it should be insufferable.

However This is the End is actually a very fun horror comedy that pits Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride, James Franco, Craig Robinson and Jonah Hill against the apocalypse. The stars might be playing themselves and managed to rope in a huge number of celebrity cameos, but This is the End laughs in the face of its slacker stoner stars and never takes itself seriously enough to irk viewers.


When Jay arrives back in LA to see old buddy Seth, they both end up at James Franco's Hollywood hills mansion for a celebrity crammed party that just happens to also be the end of the world. As it is in the book of Revelations in the Bible, it seems the rapture is upon us and those not immediately taken to heaven will be left on earth to battle it out with demons and each other. After a pit opens in front of the house swallowing most of those at the party, only the core characters are left holed up in Franco's house to bicker over food, water, a dwindling supply of drugs and are suddenly left trying to survive hell on Earth.


Fans of the Judd Apatow crew like Rogen and Hill will love this. It's got that same brand of slacker style humour that runs through many of their other films. There are movie references aplenty with The Exorcist making for one particularly hilarious scene and James Franco's camcorder (from 127 Hours) also providing much humour. If you know and like these guys and their movies, you will enjoy every second. The references drop thick and fast and are not afraid to comment on the less successful films of their back catalogue with Your Highness coming in for one particularly funny mention.


Even before the apocalypse comes knocking, it is a real pleasure to see a representation of how these characters live. Rogen and Baruchel get stoned a lot, Michael Cera takes coke and slaps Rihanna's ass and James Franco is as weird and wonderful as you would hope, clearly a little in love with his Pineapple Express co-star Rogen. If this all seems a bit self-indulgent, well it is. If you don't like these guys and their films, seriously stay away. There is nothing for you here. On the other hand, if you like your stars stoned and silly, please step forward.

There are a few mishaps. The final scene is a bit of a flop and the running time is slightly over stretched, At times it seems like a series of sketches giving it a slightly disjointed feel. There are also a couple of missed opportunities. From the guys who brought us the hilarity of two guys watching Cirque de Soleil on mushrooms (in Knocked Up) and the hysterical wonder drug of 21 Jump Street, the drug taking scene where the surviving stars ingest a bunch of drugs fails to grab any laughs and feels woefully under utilised.


However on the plus side the effects are fantastic, particularly towards the end of the film where the stars leave the safety of Franco's house. It's hard to decide whether the film is verging on promoting Christian values or whether it is really just ridiculing them. Just when you think you've seen all the celeb cameos, there is another cameo towards the end that is also hilarious and unexpected. Emma Watson shows up for one scene that is funny but borders on tasteless but this is a film full of smutty, dirty humour that the easily offended would do well to miss. It's also got a fantastic soundtrack that spans Cypress Hill to Black Sabbath.

At times This is the End feels like a bunch of mates larking about. But when the bunch of mates include some of the funniest guys around, there is a hell of a lot of pleasure to be had from hanging out with them. Even if it is the end of the world.

This is the End is out on 28th June 2013 in the UK. It was one of my top 5 films to see in June. Thanks to the Total Film screening club for the tickets. Here is the trailer:



More recent reviews at I Love That Film:

Ruby Sparks Review

The Look of Love Review 

21 & Over Review

Iron Man 3 Review

Olympus Has Fallen Review

Spring Breakers Review

Thursday, 3 November 2011

21 Jump Street Trailer

Not sure how fans of the original show are going to take this trailer.  Insult or update?  I only saw the Johnny Depp starring show a couple of times as a kid and remember very little about it.  Therefore this trailer made me laugh out loud.  It's got some hilarious lines and Jonah Hill is always excellent (looking forward to the upcoming Moneyball). 

The pairing of Hill and Tatum looks like comedy gold but hopefully this 3 minute trailer(!) has not completely sucked all the goodness from the film.  I've just got to make sure I avoid watching any more promotional material for the film so there's still something left to enjoy in March when it's released.  Anyone got an opinion?  Will this be funnier than Starsky and Hutch or The Other Guys?  I hope so.