The best role of Leonardo DiCaprio in 'The Wolf of Wall Street'
The best role of Leonardo DiCaprio in 'The Wolf of Wall Street'
Regarding the broadcast in 'El Taquillazo de 'La Sexta' of 'El lobo de Wall Street' we recover the debate that arose at its premiere about the true character of the film
That man comes from monkey is something assumed by (almost) everyone. Now: What if the stock markets also come from the monkey? In 1973, Professor Burton Gordon Malkiel carried out the following experiment: comparing the predictions of several prestigious brokers with those of a blindfolded ape throwing darts madly at the stock page of the 'Wall Street Journal'.
Conclusion: if we had invested our money following the random advice of the monkey, we would have made 85% more money. This classic experiment in the random behavior of markets unwittingly plots on Martin Scorsese's 'The Wolf of Wall Street', only the film goes one step further: it's one thing for no one to know for sure how markets behave and another is the organized financial scam.
With regard to the broadcast of 'The Wolf of Wall Street' -which includes what is probably Leonardo DiCaprio's best performance-, we recover the debate that arose at the premiere of the film in 2013 about the true character of the film.
The film, in fact, includes an anthological sequence of a mob of brokers screaming and beating their chests, like gorillas out of their minds, while their bosses urge them to rip off the staff because being poor is bad vibes. All this under the euphoric effects of the largest amount of cocaine ever snorted by man. And we warn you that 'The Wolf of Wall Street' is based on a real case: that of Jordan Belfort, a successful broker convicted in the 1990s for defrauding thousands of investors.


Post a Comment
0 Comments