Watching a
Scorsese movie always lends itself to pleasurable memories. Wolf of the Wall
Street starts with DiCaprio's character moving into his lair (in this case his stock broking firm)
reminding Scorsese lovers of Mean Street’s entry of Harvey Keitel where camera
follows him as he glides through his club milking presumed and real applause.
Music, adoration and sense of entitlement of the recipient of all the attention
creates an alchemy which makes the viewer smile with amusement and concentrate
in awe at the same time. Similarly, the film has marching bands and ‘stripper stampede’
to entertain the employees. Here we see the continuation of a hallowed
tradition started by one Charles Foster Kane in 1941 ‘Citizen Kane’ to enthuse
his newspaper staff.
Many critics
have found funny tone of Wolf of the Wall Street a novelty in Scorsese
movie. The auteur has been grittily
funny throughout his distinguished career. Anyone who has followed Scorsese in
Mean Street, Casino, After Hours and, somewhat atypical, Hugo will feel
sufficiently Scorseseque in the funny moments that Wolf of the Wall Street creates. One can’t
suppress a smile on the memory of Harvey
Keitel, De Niro and friends discussing the meaning of ‘mook’ before getting
into cat fight that was to be broken by cops and end in round of drinks among
the participants. Here also we find many moments of this humorous cacophony.
Dizzying breezy
sequences with showy editing that create a tempo leading to bravura crescendo are
old Scorsese trademarks. His characters are great at verbosity (barring tongue
tied Taxi Driver). Speeches are bombastic with rustic bravado – quite unlike
Woody Allen’s talkathons of confused intellectuality. Though both, I must
admit, have their own pleasures. The enjoyable momentum created by oration on
benefits of drugs, debauchery and greed among the Decaprio’s charater and his
thuggish associates led by madcap Jonah Hill are in the same league as you
would find in Casino, Good Fellas and, again, in Mean Street. I find many similarities
in mediation on qualuudes and the Butcher explaining the ways of stabbing pig
in Gangs of New York. Both take the
story or the experience of the movie forward.
Trajectory of
rise of a small time pusher to obscene level of success replete with mind
numbing excesses and eventual downfall is an almost as established as a sub
genre. This is the basic cliché of the
Wolf of Wall Street too. What is different this time is that Scorsese stayed
away from the business of providing full closure. He kept the perspective
resolutely neutral and kept the camera in voyeur mode. Even the excess was not meant to caricature or
demean a life style. He is more concerned with conveying the unbridled joy of the
excess. He transfers the high notes of carnivalsque debauchery in full measure without
making a parody of it- quite a feat.
This is
film-making which is self consciously high strung –energy, tension and joy communicated
in clearest possible notes. Clarity dazzles but grabs you to notice the effort and
genius that has gone into the spectacle. Scorsese is loved for his flourishes, he is
worshipped for sustaining those flourishes with impeccable film making.
No comments:
Post a Comment