Jordan Belfort, the subject of The Wolf of Wall Street's abundant depiction of drug use, sexual content, and profane language brushed up against censors at the time of its release, and was a source of debate amongst critics.
Controversy aside, the movie was a critical and commercial hit, and was nominated for five The Wolf of Wall Street's details are still analyzed and it's become an everyday part of pop culture, commonly referenced by fans and celebrities alike. Belfort was initially receptive to the adaptation of his memoir, acknowledging the insanity was accurate, and the depictions of drugs too kind to reality if anything, but lamented the over-simplification of Stratton Oakmont's transition to the greed-fueled powerhouse it becomes before its eventual demise.
According to Scorsese's Wolf of Wall Street. Red Granite and CEO Riza Aziz are currently facing charges for embezzling $248 million dollars from a Malaysian state-run development fund. Belfort claims he had no idea the film was made with stolen money, and argues the scandal has tainted the rights to his story. Belfort sold the rights to his memoir and its sequel to Red Granite, but claims the company is no longer able to capitalize on the rights following the embezzlement scandal. "Belfort was completely blindsided to learn, after the fact, of the source of funding," the suit states. However, a 2017 interview surfaced where Belfort recalls knowing Red Granite were "criminals," particularly after a multi-million dollar launch party thrown shortly after acquiring the rights that wouldn't seem out of place on the floors of Stratton Oakmont. "Anybody who does this has stolen money...I knew it, it was so obvious," said Belfort.
Following a civil forfeiture suit filed by the US Department of Justice in 2016, Red Granite agreed to settle for $60 million in 2018. The company was much more dismissive of Belfort's suit. "Jordan Belfort's lawsuit is nothing more than a desperate and supremely ironic attempt to get out from under an agreement that for the first time in his life has made him rich and famous through lawful and legitimate means," said Red Granite attorney Matthew Schwartz in a statement. Belfort himself is said to only have paid $12.8 million of the $110 million owed to investors.
The news of a movie centered on people making money by ripping off others being funded by money siphoned off of a government fund is certainly ironic even before Belfort's ultimately shaky defense to get a larger paycheck out of the biopic. It could also serve as great publicity for the 2013 hit, given there is a dark authenticity to the movie's greed. Scorsese is yet to comment on the Red Granite scandal, and has most recently been in the news for his comments on the ubiquitously popular criticism from fellow directors like James Gunn, and been the source of jokes at the most recent Golden Globes. In any case, the greedy legacy of The Wolf of Wall Street lives on.
Source: Variety