‘The Wolf of Wall Street’ a reprehensible and vile movie

698

Catholic News Service

Like the animal of its title, “The Wolf of Wall Street” is a vicious and predatory piece of cinema that inculcates values directly antithetical to those of Scripture. As such it represents a deeply reprehensible misuse of the considerable talents involved in its making.

Leonardo DiCaprio stars in a scene from the movie “The Wolf of Wall Street.” The Catholic News Service classification is O — morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is R — restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. (CNS photo/Paramount)

This vile exercise in immorality charts the fact-based rise and fall of penny-stock swindler Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio). Together with his closest associates, most prominently personified here by a character called Donnie Azoff (Jonah Hill), Belfort played on the unrealistic aspirations of naive small-time investors to make himself rich. He then used his ill-gotten gains to fund a decadent lifestyle full of narcotics, status-symbol toys and casual sex.

Not surprisingly, a similar callousness to that shown toward his victims seems to have guided Belfort’s personal life, as we see when he dumps his earnest first spouse Teresa (Cristin Milioti) to marry his mistress Naomi (Margot Robbie), a trophy wife if there ever was one.

Anything but a cautionary tale, director Martin Scorsese’s screen version of Belfort’s memoir revels in greed, criminality, substance abuse and bedroom behavior straight from the barnyard. It also sends viewers the resentment-fueled message that capitalism is a con game and that only fools and drones try to make a living honestly.

Thus the diligent work of straight-arrow FBI agent Patrick Denham (Kyle Chandler), who eventually succeeds in bringing Belfort down, is shown to be largely pointless: Though stripped of his assets, Belfort has the last laugh when he’s consigned to a minimum-security prison with the facilities and atmosphere of a posh country club.

Given that Belfort is a real-life felon who presumably ruined the financial security of many of his duped investors, the fact that Terence Winter’s screenplay invites audiences to root for his wrongdoing, and to take pleasure in the excesses it financed, is troubling to say the least. Moviegoers dedicated to Judeo-Christian morality should avoid subsidizing this repentance-free and socially irresponsible project.

The film contains a benign view of sinful and illegal actions, domestic violence, strong sexual content, including graphic aberrant and adulterous sexual activity and full nudity, drug use, frequent profanities, pervasive rough and crude language and a few obscene gestures. The Catholic News Service classification is O, morally offensive. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is R, restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

Mulderig is on the staff of Catholic News Service.