Sunday, March 9, 2014

Film review The wolf of Wall street

The film  Wolf of Wall street  was very impressed. The director was trying to show the capture of the real life during the period of the late 80s.  Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) - a successful financier. He created one of the largest brokerages, and  recognized financial genius of his time. Jordan made a fortune through financial transactions on Wall Street. No one knows how hard he can guess each time falling shares of the company. To relax after work, Jordan spent his time in the pub to drink there. After that, he sat on drugs.
 The movie was three hours long, but at the same time funny. It definitely did not feel like a 3 hour production. Humor was bright, though very cynical. Money, power, women and drugs were the main components of the film. Honestly, it flew in the same breath . Perhaps , during the first 30 minutes feels a little distracting from the overall rate, but worth their wait, as the drive begins . 
 As for me, it's impossible to ignore or forget this film. It 's like a bomb absorbs consciousness and fry the brain. 

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Podcast with Iryna .Review on the book '' Dying to be me" . part 2

  This week we are continue to talk about chapter "Many religions ,many paths". Anita felt pressure from the first day of school because of her religion ."How come your family does't go to church on Sunday ?"her classmate Joseph wanted to know one day, after I'd been attending school for about a month. "Because we aren't Catholic .We are Hindu and we go to the temple on Monday evening ,"she said."You need to tell your parents to take you to church to pray to God every Sunday ,otherwise you won't get to the heaven when you die,"Joseph told her. "Are you sure about that ?" I asked ."Because if it were true , I'm sure my parents would know ." That afternoon when she got home from school , she decided to talk to her mother about what Joseph had said. "No , Beta ,"her mother said ."You don't have to wary about that. Just tell everyone at school that we're Hindus; and when you're a little older , you'll study our scriptures ,the Vedas. People from different places have different faiths ."Anita always true to prove there classmates she is just like them but have different religions
In the next chapter Anita talks about religions and her experience of school life. "Many religions ,many paths".In contrast to the Hindu tradition she learn at home ,her early education began at a Catholic school run by nuns .And by the time she was seven ,she already started to learn the impact of cultural and religions differences .Her school was housed in a beautiful expensive old building that was three stories high and crowned with a lovely chapel.The school also happen to be conveniently located within short walking distance of our home. On her first day .she wore her new uniform with great pride .It consisted of a crisp white pinafore and a navy -blue blazer with a smart red emblem on it.She felt really good about herself because when she entered the school ground ,she saw all the other children dressed the same she was .The uniform gave her a sense of belonging .They started each day by singing hyms,which she also thoroughly enjoyed . Her experience continues in the next chapter.
 

Monday, February 3, 2014

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Podcast with IRYNA ,In my podcast I will review movie "The Wolf of Wall Street ".


In my podcast, I will review movie "The Wolf of Wall Street ".

"Hello  everyone, and welcome to my podcast ' In this podcast, I will review one of my new movie "The Wolf of Wall Street ". If you  did not watch this movie you definatli shoud!I will review some of the  movie  cast ,and talk brefly about movie. So if you  are intresting  just come and join me

Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort in The Wolf of Wall Street 2013 The Wolf of Wall Street Review
The Wolf of Wall Street transports us back to late-1980s/early-1990s New York City, where Queens boy Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) has been tirelessly working since his youth to achieve the American dream: getting filthy rich in the financial services industry. Unfortunately, Jordan’s debut on Wall Street came at a time when the market was going through one of its biggest downturns, leaving the hungry and ambitious young man in a career wilderness with no sense of direction.
Looking for a path through the woods, Jordan sniffs out work at a small penny-stock firm – a place filled with the type of schlubs who have never seen a real wolf at work. Within months Jordan is making money hand over fist, and he quickly moves on to a grander vision: opening a trading firm composed of his buddies and other roughneck salesmen who don’t mind swindling people in pursuit of personal gain. But with drugs, money, women and all-around excess overflowing his life, Jordan’s reign as “The Wolf of Wall Street” is soon threatened by a coup d’état led by a relentless FBI agent (Kyle Chandler).
Kyle Chandler in The Wolf of Wall Street 2013 The Wolf of Wall Street Review
Kyle Chandler in ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’
Marking the fifth collaboration between master filmmaker Martin Scorsese and leading man Leaonardo DiCaprio, The Wolf of Wall Street is nothing less than a brilliant and nightmarish portrait of the true face behind America’s greed culture, which manages to impress, amuse, offend and outright terrify – often all at once. It does to the tribal circle of the financial services industry what Goodfellas did to the tribe of the Italian mafia – and arguably does it better than Goodfellas (certainly better than the similarly themed American Hustle).
On the surface, The Wolf of Wall Street is a black comedy character study that is soaked in grime. Adapted from the memoir of the same name by the real Jordan Belfort, the script by Boardwalk Empire creator Terrence Winter uses voice-over narration as a framing device (like Goodfellas) in order to allow Belfort’s story to unfold “in his own language,” so to speak. Both the voice-over narration and scenes of ensemble dialogue are rattled off with an acerbic and foul-mouthed frankness that is almost poetic in its sheer level of crassness – and also darkly funny for a surprising amount of the film’s 3-hour runtime. As far as raunch-comedies go, this is one of the snappier and wittier ones made in a while – who knew Scorsese and Winter could beat the Farrelly Brothers at their own game?
Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street 2013 The Wolf of Wall Street Review
Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’
However, in the hands of one of the most masterful visual storytellers there is, what is a raunch-com/biopic on the surface is transformed into something much more significant and relevant. Behind the lowbrow façade, Wolf of Wall Street is actually a brilliant deconstruction of the Alpha-dog, “Kill to eat” mentality that not only drives Wall Street, but has become, in some ways, the driving philosophy of America’s modern greed culture. A sharp critical eye will notice the seams of great filmmaking at work – including the implementation of thematically relevant pop-culture staples (songs, films, etc.), as well as visual motifs and metaphors meant to convey the deeper thematic subtext of the film.
For example: there is a reverse point-of-view shot of Belfort’s acolytes gathered in front of him that recurs throughout the film – a crowd which evolves from a handful of blue-collar schmoes in an old garage to (eventually) a packed hall full of admirers from all over the world. Much of the film is likewise sequenced according to circular experiences of manic debauchery the characters engage in over and over – starting in the high-fantasy of hedonistic allure, but slowly devolving into a macabre and perverse circus of amoral indulgence and grotesque behavior.
Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street 2013 The Wolf of Wall Street Review
Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill in ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’
However, even during the most disgustingly raunchy or absurdly bizarre sequences in the film (see: those soon-to-be-infamous quaaludes scenes), there is some sort of visual or auditory evidence that this is all being done with clear purpose and intent. This film pushes things way past the point of decency – past the point of envy or admiration but never believability – and that’s the entire point of the commentary.
By the time Belfort goes through his inevitable fall (and subsequent resurrection), the man has become something so grotesque and off-putting that the lack of character development in the script can clearly be seen as a binding and damning statement – a frightful declaration that says, “Here America, this is your dark heart!” in much the same way that Daniel Plainview had thoroughly horrified us by the time he made his declaration of being “finished,” while squatted in his own slovenly mess.
In the case of The Wolf of Wall Street, the most frightening thing is not that this all happened (it did); or that it happened this way (it did); it’s that it might be (read: definitely is) still happening this way: the perverse mania the movie showers us in hasn’t been cured at all – it’s become an airborne contagion that is globally widespread and all-encompassing. To paraphrase Gordon Gekko, “Greed is good, and now it seems it’s legal,” and judging by WoWS, we should all be fundamentally terrified about that reality.
The Wolf of Wall Street Reviews starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill 570x294 The Wolf of Wall Street Review
The new messiah
Serving as the embodiments of this mania that has defined an era, are Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill in the central roles of Jordan Belfort and his longtime friend/associate, Donnie Azoff, respectively. Both actors are tasked with occupying their extensive screen time with an almost non-stop burn of manic debauchery, expressed through vocabulary that would make a pirate blush. Hill continues to prove that his abilities extended well beyond low-brow comedy; though to be fair, it could be argued that his role – with its banter and absurdity – is exactly that. Still, he’s great in it, and steals scenes left and right whenever he’s in them.
Leo has the more complicated task of balancing the grotesqueness of Belfort’s personality with moments of real charisma and insight – as well as the dry wit and meta comedy employed by the version of Belfort who narrates the tale. DiCaprio shines bright on all three fronts, without question.
Margot Robbie in The Wolf of Wall Street 2013 The Wolf of Wall Street Review
Margot Robbie in ‘The Wolf of Wall Street’
The supporting cast is a mix of breakout performers (Walking Dead star Jon Bernthal as a Belfort’s friend/bag man, or Pan Am star Margot Robbie as a trophy wife vixen); a few hilarious and winking cameo roles (Matthew McConaughey as a Belfort’s Wall Street mentor, or Rob Reiner as his hot-tempered father, to name a few); and a few reliable actors bolstering some key supporting roles (Kyle Chandler as the FBI agent, or The Artist star Jean Dujardin as a corrupt Swiss banker). In short, the movie has a fantastic ensemble, each of whom is put the best use of his/her abilities, with nary a weak link to be found.
In the end, The Wolf of Wall Street is an outrageous and repugnant reflection of something very real – and very rotten – at the core of our society. Some people will inevitably be so put off by the harsh composition of the message that they fail to heed the importance of that message; but in presenting so much of the bad and the ugly behind Wall Street so unflinchingly, Scorsese has crafted an insightful – and important – deconstruction of post-millennial America’s moral erosion. These are the barbarians at our gates.


 

Sunday, January 19, 2014

True Grit

Mattie Ross .The movie follows Mattie on her quest for revenge against the man who killed her father.  To help her in this venture, she hires notorious U.S. marshall, Rooster Cogburn, known for his ruthless grit.  The marshall initially dismisses and ridicules Mattie because of her age and gender, however she convinces him of her competence and they set out on the trail to find the killer.
What’s so captivating about Mattie’s character is how witty and smart she is, and how daring, self reliant, and independent.  She’s full of confidence in herself and her abilities in a hostile male dominated world.  

LaBeouf is  a self-proclaimed Texas Ranger, whose name feels more like a running joke than anything. He is a pretentious man with a big mustache and a high opinion of himself. He suffers numerous indignities, and turns out to be more complicated than he at first seems. LaBeouf’s self-loathing, which manifests in his focused interest in his own appearance, also gives him critical insight into others. He might not have Cogburn’s skill or experience, but he has his backbone.



Rooster Cogburn   are drunken U.S. marshal. Man hard enough and fast enough, he don't have time to think about how many's with him. He thinks about himself, and how he might get clear of that wrath that's about to set down on him.Because of his drunkenness and questionable use of firearms, aging U.S. Marshal  has been stripped of his badge. But he's given a chance to redeem himself after a village in Indian is overrun by a gang of violent, ruthless criminals, who've killed an elderly preacher, Rev. George Goodnight. His spinster daughter, Eula Goodnight, wants to track the criminals down and makes Rooster an unwilling partner. But Rooster must use care, because the criminals, led by Hawk and Breed.