Showing posts with label Leonardo Dicaprio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leonardo Dicaprio. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

New Trailer: Team Scorsese - Dicaprio's Wolf Of Wall Street



Martin Scorsese and Leonardo Dicaprio team up again in the crime drama The Wolf of Wall Street. The film, based on the autobiography by the same name, follows Jordan Belfort, a headstrong New York stockbroker (played by Dicaprio), who refuses to cooperate in a massive security fraud case involving widespread corruption on Wall Street, in the corporate banking world and mob infiltration. Drugs, sex, money, greed, power. This black satire looks fast-paced, filthy, and rather hilarious. A lobster get's thrown at someone, Dicaprio does a little jig, and Matthew McConaughey performs an off-the-cuff-chest-pound-hum thing (which supposedly was completely improvised). Not to mention, Jonah Hill is also in it. Certainly, it will be interesting to see the dynamics of a unique cast.

The film hits theatres later this year on November 15th.

Tuesday, 21 May 2013

Flashback: Leonardo Dicaprio Flying Blind in The Aviator

Martin Scorsese directing Leonardo Dicaprio in The Aviator (2004)
Doing a little googling this weekend, I happened upon Leonardo Dicaprio's list of awards and nominations. He's got 63 nominations, 24 of those are awards in his pocket (yet none of them are an Oscar...yet). Now, I've seen quite a few Leo films thus far, so it surprised me when I noticed a film I've never seen. And more importantly, a film Dicaprio has won a Golden Globe for. The Aviator, a biopic directed by Martin Scorcese depicting the early years of legendary director and aviator Howard Hughes' career. Scorsese + Dicaprio = I was sure this film would be good.
Leonardo Dicaprio as Howard Hughes in The Aviator
Movie Moment: The projector room scene (aka the "Come in with the Milk" scene). This scene truly is exemplary of Scorcese as an artist. Particularly, I was captivated by the shots where Hughes' body seem to transform into a screen or canvas as the projected images of his film "Hell's Angels" blanket him. Planes shoot across his body, as if his skin were the sky. In this moment, the self-destructing Hughes becomes one with the madness of the crashing planes. Both are flying blind. The imagery of this moment demonstrates just how infinite the layers of storytelling can be. And how film can go from art to masterpiece.  
Did you have a movie moment during The Aviator?