Originally thought that Martin would focus on business warfare, but the more he looked, the more he felt that it was tailor-made for Leonardo. The 3 hours were filled with sex, drugs, and a screen full of swearing. Leonardo gave a vivid interpretation of a gangster from Wall Street. He is smart, eloquent, and contagious. Several paragraphs of his speech are indeed very inspiring (a bit like a pyramid scheme). The most amazing part should be the scene where the film climbs from his club to the sports car at the end, which is really different from the original image of the little white face. Seems like he's fit for this kind of hysterical play right now, as was the last Shutter Island, kind of in the direction of Jack Nicholson. . . It's a pity that he worked so hard, but he still missed the little golden man. .
Looking at the entire film, there are too few scenes in the business battle, and the description is not clear. Is it really that easy to make money on Wall Street? A few sales calls are worth millions? Maybe that was the case at that time, or maybe the point of the movie wasn't there, but anyway, it was still enjoyable to watch.
The end of the film is like a dream, the wife and children are separated, the debt is ridden, and he is imprisoned. . . Everything is back to reality. Just like Belford's father said in the movie -
"the chickens hadcome home to roof."
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