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The 10 Best ‘The Wolf of Wall Street Quotes, Ranked

Wolf Of Wall Street Quotes

Director Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), where Leonardo Dicaprio performs as the main character Jordan Belfort, describes the unbound, immoral, and risky business of Wall Street which was prevalent in the late 1980s and 1990s. The film is brimful of unforgettable parts, ridiculous behaviors, and most importantly, great many famous lines. These lines give us a short understanding of the characters, their attitudes, and especially the havoc within that moves the plot forward.

In this paragraph, we have provided details of the 10 most memorable lines from the movie The Wolf of Wall Street that audiences and critics rated highly. Each of them has its own importance that helped the film in gaining wide fame and an everlasting effect.

1. I’m not leaving! I’m not f*ing leaving!

This is perhaps the most iconic phrase from the film and summarizes every aspect of perseverance and commitment that Jordan Belfort possesses. In one particular scene, everyone is astonished when he announces that he will not resign from the company, expressing his wish to lead Stratton Oakmont. This particular moment is very thrilling and daring for when anticipating the fall of the empire, Belfort is often so unapologetically defiant even. It also challenges the very laws that are meant to uphold order, showing the extent of a man’s thirst for power that he will do anything rather than relinquish control.

The 10 Best 'The Wolf of Wall Street Quotes, Ranked
The 10 Best 'The Wolf of Wall Street Quotes, Ranked 4

When it comes to the message that reverberates through the crowd, it is once approval for wealth and power, and the new line is stated by Belfort as a maximum tossing in on one ‘ultimate’ competition, or contest, are ‘us’ against all others.

2. “Sell me this pen.”

This straight-forward but striking phrase is the ultimate measure of a sales person’s capability, as depicted in the movie. This is a phrase used by Belfort in order to test someone’s convincing and scheming ability, which are the main aspects of his job. The pen signifies more than just writing, it is about the business of finance, where words and self-belief creates and sells a product, not necessarily the product in physical form.

The 10 Best 'The Wolf of Wall Street Quotes, Ranked
The 10 Best 'The Wolf of Wall Street Quotes, Ranked 5

Also, this line encapsulates the very business principles within which Jordan operated: any product can be sold to any person at any moment. It’s a seduction in the most transactional of sense and it is there throughout the entire film.

3. “There’s no nobility in poverty. I’ve been a rich man, and I’ve been a poor man. And I choose rich every f*ing time.

This quote goes straight to the core of what Belfort thinks and believes. To him, wealth is all that matters, and being poor is not an admirable trait. He does not apologize for wanting to get rich, nor does he hide the fact that he would rather be immoral than be poor.

The given quote also reflects the dominant themes of the movie – greed and excess – by accentuating corrupt morals that stem from the obsession to make money. It is important to highlight further Belfort’s aggressive attitude towards poverty and the worship of money as the highest virtue.

    4. “Let me tell you something. There’s no nobility in poverty.”

    Although this statement may appear to be a replica of the last elsewhere, its recurrence goes to show the lengths to which Belfort subscribes to the notion that money is the ultimate goal. This however has a more contemplative tone – as if Belfort is seeking to explain his actions not just to the audience but himself as well.

    This is also the climax of self-awareness within the film. It’s not about getting more money; it’s about creating further rationalizations as to why pursuing wealth, however terribly unscrupulous, is completely okay.

    5. “You gotta pump those numbers up. Those are rookie numbers.”

    This line is taken from a scene where Jordan Belfort speaks with Mark Hanna (as portrayed by Matthew McConaughey). Mark Hanna being an accomplished stock broker assists Jordan Belfort with counteractive measures on how to ‘make it’ on wall street. His nonchalant approach towards unbridled extremity provides both humor and trepidation.

    This simply illustrates the movie’s sober overdoses that every character or does not about any of those characters fill the walls of the concerned Place. posters, pictures or sculpturs of excesses this time in the negative most extreme confused visited straight – money, drugs, pleasures, nothing is never enough. Apart from being horrendous, it demonstrates the extent of decadence and hedonism of the ‘sion’ that is in the characters in that when hanna calls broilfts ‘rookie numbers’ it is an understatement.

    6. “Was all this legal? Absolutely f*ing not.

    Belfort’s sly recounting of his own crimes is preceded by a confident joke. It serves as a reminder that even in the midst of all the chaos, Belfort understands that there is a moral code that exists — one that he, consciously or unconsciously, chooses to ignore. Doesn’t feel bad. Enjoys it, in fact.

    The movie manipulates the audience’s moral compass, and this particular line illustrates the character’s approach to the borderline between crime and income. It also suggests that there are certain deeper problems in the connected world of finance, As where there are customers ready to pay, the law will be stretched, if not broken altogether.

    7. “The year I turned 26, I made $49 million, which really pissed me off because it was three shy of a million a week.”

    This statement succinct captures Jordan Belfort’s extreme avarice. Even an enormous amount of money that one would reasonably consider millions of dollars in salary for under a year’s period is not enough. Even the disappointment that one could only earn less than a million dollars then rather than another a million a week, illustrates the fact that that person can never feel contented with any level of accomplishment.

    At what point does a man find it funny when he is being cut off at crazy orders? Disclaimer: This is both an outrageous and comical line illustrating how warped God’s view of money has turned out. This also goes to the extent of developing the idea of too much which is one of the themes of the film.

    8. “Act as if! Act as if you’re a wealthy man, rich already, and then you’ll surely become rich.”

    Belfort’s words reflect the very essence of the concept of ‘faking it until making it.’ This sharp acquaintance with the tactics of his success encourages everyone to display bravado for fearless unshakeable success, however unrealized this may be.

    For Bomber, the beach to which the actor cannot reach, is the entire idea of acting as if. This is how he ‘fakes’ his wealth and prosperity, and ‘mocks’ everyone while climbing up the hierarchy even if the very spine of his empire is made up of digestive system of jailhouse gangsterism.

    9. “Money doesn’t just buy you a better life, better food, better cars, better women—it also makes you a better person.”

    In this instance, Belfort expresses an extremely pessimistic view regarding money. To him, riches do not only enable people to gain material possessions, but are also regarded as an asset that enhances a person’s stature. This perverse moral framework is central to the ideology of the film towards capitalism and its vices.

    This is a statement representative of Belfort’s unhinged train of thought: in his utopia, money is the only acceptable form of measuring worth, and where there’s no money, there’s no person.

    10. “The only thing standing between you and your goal is the bullsh*t story you keep telling yourself.”

    This is one of the uplifting quotes which makes the audience glued to Belfort. It centers on taking charge of oneself and knowing that one can accomplish whatever they want if only they stopped whining. and while the counsel appears to be quite positive outwardly, looking at when it comes from Belfort, there is an underlying gloom.

    It represents the ambition which made him successful, but the same ambition that made him fall. This quote sums up the purpose of the film, which is the understanding of ambition, its merits and demerits.

    Conclusion

    In The Wolf of Wall Street, the importance of the quotes is not only for amusement purposes—they instead portray the themes of greed, decadence and moral decay that are embodied by not only the character of Jordan Belfort but also the world of money and high finance. Every quotation exposes the twisted morals of the group and more so their drive to acquire money without regard to the immorality or illegality of their actions. This is also seen in the quotations where the viewer understands the overt mockery of the film to the so-called American Dream that success is all about money and at any cost.

    The movie employs rich elements of humor, shocking statements as well as puns to mesmerize the audience with the desire to acquire huge wealth and the dangerous master game with hardly any rules played for the enjoyment of manipulation. Such memorable lines have earned their place in numerous films and history interestingly for the knee slapping nature, keen articulation of thoughts and their description of a society in which excess is the only shortcoming.

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