

It turns out the suspicion was justified. Victor wanted to start his own firm and was thus viewed with suspicion by Belfort. The Chester Ming ( Kenneth Choi) character, for example, is based on a real person named Victor Wang who had a much more interesting role to play in Belfort’s memoir than in the film. The merry band of misfits and former weed dealers that make up the core Stratton staff are mostly based on real people, but their exact work histories and relationships to Belfort are either simplified or omitted from the film. He spent 20 months in prison after the FBI unraveled Stratton’s schemes.
WOLF OF WALL STREET FULL MOVIE CRACK
Amazingly, it’s also true that Porush married his first cousin and brought Belfort to a crack den. Porush did, however, admit to eating an employee’s goldfish in order to send a message. Porush similarly was not aboard Belfort’s yacht when it capsized and sank during a storm (that was another group of friends, all of whom were rescued by the Italian Coast Guard). He also confirmed to Mother Jones that nobody at the firm ever actually referred to Belfort as “The Wolf” or “The Wolf of Wall Street.”Īlthough the film depicts Donnie as being resuscitated by Belfort after choking on food while under the influence of Quaaludes, it was actually another friend of Belfort’s whose life was saved when Belfort performed CPR on him.

In an interview with Mother Jones, Porush denied that several events depicted in the film ever happened, including the infamous dwarf-tossing scene (an idea that was seemingly shot down by Belfort for being too outrageous). He was not, as the film depicts, a children’s furniture salesman who quit his job to work for Belfort when he saw one of Belfort’s pay stubs. Porush was introduced to Belfort through his wife. Of course, once Belfort relinquished control, Stratton went on a downward spiral from which it would never recover.ĭonnie Azoff is based on a real person named Danny Porush, who was Belfort’s right-hand man at Stratton and apparently an out-of-control Quaalude addict. In reality, Belfort did step down but heavily implied in his speech that he would still be running Stratton from the sidelines by giving “advice” to Donnie’s real-life counterpart. Then, mid-speech, he decides to reverse course and screams “I’m not f***ing leaving!” to rapturous applause. One especially dramatic moment in the film that is only partially true is when Belfort gives a speech to his employees, informing them that he is stepping down as leader and handing over the reins to Jonah Hill’s character Donnie.

Belfort never even interacted with the FBI agent pursuing him until he was arrested. Belfort also wasn’t reckless or dumb enough to attempt to bribe an FBI agent, as depicted in the film. He would often use his health problems as a partial excuse for abusing various substances, but the film downplays his reliance on pharmaceuticals to alleviate his chronic pain. In an effort to perhaps make Belfort seem a bit less crazed than his on-screen persona, it should be mentioned that despite the film citing “back pain” in air quotes as a reason for his drug habit, Belfort really did have constant back issues that required multiple surgeries. His first memoir, The Wolf of Wall Street, was published in 2007. Eventually, Belfort was caught by the FBI and after serving 22 months in federal prison, became a writer and motivational speaker. He later married the Duchess, and they had a tumultuous relationship filled with deceit and abuse that ended in divorce. He cheated on his first wife with a woman nicknamed “The Duchess of Bay Ridge,” played by Margot Robbie in the film.
WOLF OF WALL STREET FULL MOVIE PROFESSIONAL
While all this was happening in his professional life, Belfort’s personal life was plagued by addictions to numerous illegal substances, primarily cocaine and Quaaludes. He recruited young, mostly working-class kids from Long Island to work at Stratton and indoctrinated them into what he repeatedly calls, in his 2007 memoir, a “cult.” They were taught to worship at the altar of money and to con their clients into buying worthless stock. Belfort was violating probably hundreds of laws at any given time, most of which involved defrauding his shareholders and manipulating the stock of dozens of companies. The overall story of Jordan Belfort ( Leonardo DiCaprio) and his brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont, as presented in Scorsese’s film, is true to life.
