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: Belfort and his partner, Donnie Azoff (Jonah Hill), indulge in extreme drug use, lavish parties, and reckless spending.
: The film set a Guinness World Record for the most swearing in a major theatrical release, with the "f-word" used 569 times—averaging about 3 times per minute.
180 minutes (3 hours exactly)
For those discovering it at in 2025+, the film resonates differently. In a post-GameStop, post-crypto-crash world, Belfort’s manipulation of penny stocks feels less like a period piece and more like a documentary of the present.
Jordan befriends his neighbor Donnie Azoff, and the two found their own company. They recruit several of Jordan's friends, whom Jordan trains in the art of the "hard sell". The firm's basic method of operation is a pump and dump scheme. To cloak this, Jordan gives the firm the respectable-sounding name "Stratton Oakmont" in 1989. After an exposé in Forbes, hundreds of ambitious young financiers flock to his company. Jordan becomes immensely successful and slides into a decadent lifestyle of prostitutes and drugs. He has an affair with a woman named Naomi Lapaglia; when his wife Teresa finds out, they divorce, and he marries Naomi in 1991. Meanwhile, the SEC and the FBI begin investigating Stratton Oakmont.