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What The Real Wolf of Wall Street says Martin Scorsese’s movie got right — and wrong

Paramount+’s new docuseries revisits Jordan Belfort’s rise and fall, revealing what Scorsese’s Oscar-nominated film got right and what it left out.

What The Real Wolf of Wall Street says Martin Scorsese’s movie got right — and wrong

Paramount+’s new docuseries revisits Jordan Belfort’s rise and fall, revealing what Scorsese’s Oscar-nominated film got right and what it left out.

By JP Mangalindan

July 14, 2026 12:02 p.m. ET

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Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort in 'The Wolf of Wall Street'; the real Jordan Belfort

Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort in ā€˜The Wolf of Wall Street’; the real Jordan Belfort. Credit:

Paramount Pictures; Nadine Macaluso/Paramount+

- *The Real Wolf of Wall Street* is a docuseries about the rise and fall of Jordan Belfort, played by Leonardo DiCaprio in 2013’s *The Wolf of Wall Street*.

- Friends and colleagues of the real-life Belfort reveal what Martin Scorsese’s Oscar-nominated film got right and wrong.

- The three-part docuseries is now streaming on Paramount+.

Martin Scorsese’s 2013 film *The Wolf of Wall Street* turned Jordan Belfort’s cocaine-and-Quaaludes reign at Stratton Oakmont into one of the wildest rides in modern American cinema. (It even set a Guinness World Record for movie profanity — 506 uses of the F-word, if you’re counting.) But according to Paramount+’s new three-part docuseries *The Real Wolf of Wall Street*, the truth behind the movie was often darker and more complex than what made it to the screen.

The film traces the rise of Belfort, as played by Leonardo DiCaprio, from small-time stockbroker to the multimillionaire founder of Stratton Oakmont, whose pump-and-dump schemes financed a decade of drugs, sex workers, and yachts before an FBI investigation brought it all crashing down. Belfort went on to spend 22 months in prison after pleading guilty to securities fraud and money laundering charges in 1999.

Drawing on thousands of FBI documents, archival footage, and interviews with former Stratton Oakmont brokers, prosecutors, and Belfort’s second wife, Nadine Macaluso (the real-life inspiration for Margot Robbie’s Naomi Lapaglia), the docuseries reexamines that story almost scene by scene. As noted in the series, Belfort did not respond to requests to be interviewed.

Some of the movie’s most outrageous moments, it turns out, were toned down from reality. Others were invented outright. And a surprising number happened almost exactly as depicted.

Here’s everything *The Real Wolf of Wall Street* says the movie got right and wrong.

What The Wolf of Wall Street got wrong

Jordan Belfort partying, as seen on 'The Real Wolf of Wall Street'

Jordan Belfort partying, as seen on ā€˜The Real Wolf of Wall Street’.

Ross Portenoy/Paramount+

**The amount of partying**

As outrageous as Scorsese’s film gets, Joel Cohen, the former federal prosecutor who prosecuted Belfort, says the movie still undersold what daily life at Stratton Oakmont was really like: drugs, alcohol, sex workers, a little stock trading, then repeat. ā€œ[The brokers] would describe it the way someone would describe what they ate for breakfast,ā€ Cohen recalls.

**The private flight to Belfort’s bachelor party**

In the film, a private flight to Las Vegas for Jordan’s bachelor party becomes one long bacchanal of Quaaludes and escorts. That indulgence, says Howie Gelfand, a former Stratton Oakmont broker who partially inspired Jonah Hill’s Donnie Azoff, was simply depicted too early: there were no sex workers on the actual flight. They were, however, waiting for the group the moment the plane touched down.

**Belfort and Denham’s yacht meeting**

Gregory Coleman, the inspiration for Kyle Chandler's Agent Denham

Gregory Coleman, the inspiration for Kyle Chandler’s Agent Denham.

CBS/Paramount+

One of the film’s tensest set pieces sees Jordan attempting to bribe Kyle Chandler’s FBI agent, Patrick Denham (a stand-in for the real-life Gregory Coleman), aboard his yacht. It doesn’t work, however, and the scene ends with Jordan throwing lobsters and flicking cash at the departing agents, a goodbye about as subtle as everything else about him.

The scene was entirely invented. Coleman didn’t meet Belfort face-to-face until the day of his arrest at his Brookville, N.Y., mansion over Labor Day weekend in 1998. ā€œI remember him sitting there. He was in handcuffs. His eyes were very glassy. I couldn’t tell if he was tired, or if he was high,ā€ Coleman recalls in the docuseries.

**The money handoff**

The film stages an argument between Donnie and Jon Bernthal’s Brad Bodnick during a money exchange that ends with Brad’s arrest. The docuseries tells a different story: the real handoff involved Stratton Oakmont co-founder Danny Porush — who also partially inspired Hill’s Donnie — and Todd Garrett, who inspired the character of Brad. It also had less bickering.

After spotting a suspicious meeting in the parking lot, security guards at a Queens shopping center called police, convinced they’d stumbled onto a drug deal. Officers found $200,000 in cash inside a briefcase. Garrett’s excuse: the money was a loan from a broker friend for a heart transplant, complete with a scar he lifted his shirt to display. Police weren’t sure what to make of an alibi that creative, so they arrested him anyway. The incident ultimately helped tip investigators off to the money-laundering scheme.

**No cash was taped to anyone’s body**

Katarina Čas as Chantalle in 'The Wolf of Wall Street'

Katarina Čas as Chantalle in ā€˜The Wolf of Wall Street’.

The film’s most memorable smuggling scene finds Chantalle (Katarina Čas), Brad’s Swiss-born wife, with stacks of bills taped to her skin as she travels from the U.S. to Switzerland. The docuseries tells a different story: cash packed into locked Louis Vuitton bags and checked as ordinary luggage. It’s a much less sensational way to move a fortune, but arguably a more glamorous one.

**The farewell speech**

DiCaprio’s rousing monologue in which Jordan talks himself into staying at Stratton Oakmont after announcing he’s quitting has become one of the film’s most memorable moments. According to the docuseries, however, it never happened. By the time the SEC closed in, Belfort had already decided not to fight. He settled for $2.6 million, accepted a lifetime ban from the securities industry, and voluntarily left the firm he had founded, handing the reins to Porush.

Jordan Belfort, who inspired 'The Wolf of Wall Street,' sues movie producers for fraud

Jordan Belfort; The Wolf of Wall Street

Leonardo DiCaprio at Globes: 'Thank God' I didn't become Jordan Belfort

Leonardo Dicaprio 15

What The Wolf of Wall Street got right

Jordan Belfort

Jordan Belfort.

Federal Bureau of Investigation/Paramount+.

**The sales pitch**

Jordan’s cold-calling sales pitch in the film — the one where he tells new recruits that Stratton Oakmont’s founders arrived on the Mayflower and chiseled their name into Plymouth Rock — echoes the training scripts real Stratton Oakmont brokers were handed on day one, complete with Xeroxed rejection sheets and rebuttals. ā€œAll you had to do to be successful was follow the script,ā€ former Stratton Oakmont vice president Jordan Shamah says in *The Real Wolf of Wall Street*.

**Belfort’s first wife catching him with a mistress**

Two interviewees say the scene in which Jordan’s first wife discovers him getting intimate with Naomi in a limo outside his apartment is drawn directly from real life. ā€œThat is total fact,ā€ says one former colleague.

**The stunts (and there were more of them)**

Jonah Hill eating a goldfish in 'The Wolf of Wall Street'; Howie Gelfand on 'The Real Wolf of Wall Street'

Jonah Hill eating a goldfish in ā€˜The Wolf of Wall Street’; Howie Gelfand on ā€˜The Real Wolf of Wall Street’.

Paramount Pictures/Ā CBS/Paramount+

The film’s goldfish-eating scene, in which Donnie swallows a broker’s pet to punish him for slacking off, really happened. In reality, however, two goldfish met that fate, not one.

According to the docuseries, it was just one of many stunts brokers were paid — however modestly — to perform. Underlings were also dared to eat a cup of wasabi for a few hundred dollars. ā€œThere were always takers,ā€ recalls one former Stratton Oakmont employee. A pair of twins, meanwhile, offered to hook themselves up to a car battery for $10,000. They made it eight seconds, not the required 10, and were never paid.

**They did shave a woman’s head, but for less money**

A woman's head being shaved in 'The Wolf of Wall Street'

A woman’s head being shaved in ā€˜The Wolf of Wall Street’.

That infamous office party where Jordan offers a female employee $10,000 to shave her head was based on a real incident. In real life, though, the prize was just $5,000, proof that even Hollywood can’t resist a little inflation.

**Belfort’s Hamptons speech**

Jordan’s habit of delivering motivational speeches even while cutting loose shows up in the film’s party sequences, and there’s footage to back it up. In archival footage from a Hamptons gathering featured in the docuseries, Belfort can be heard rallying his employees from a balcony. ā€œStratton Oakmont is made up of everybody here,ā€ he says. ā€œYou guys are a part of it. You built it, and without you, it doesn’t run. And if we all stick together, we’ll be a legend on Wall Street, guys.ā€

**The fate of Belfort’s yacht**

According to several interviewees, Belfort’s yacht — named *Nadine* in real life and *Naomi* in the film — encountered a disaster much like the one depicted onscreen. The docuseries says 19 people were aboard when Belfort ignored warnings to remain in port and sailed into a Mediterranean storm. Waves reached 30 to 40 feet, flooding the yacht and sending seawater crashing through it as passengers panicked. ā€œI definitely thought I was dying,ā€ Macaluso recalls. The Italian Navy ultimately rescued everyone by helicopter.

**The country club crash**

Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort in 'The Wolf of Wall Street'

Leonardo DiCaprio as Jordan Belfort in ā€˜The Wolf of Wall Street’.

The scene in which Jordan drives to a country club near his house after taking Quaaludes, culminating in a slow, painful crawl back to his car, was inspired by a real-life incident. A couple of details got a Hollywood upgrade along the way, though: the real vehicle was a Mercedes-Benz, not a Lamborghini, and Belfort tumbled down eight steps, not the dramatic 20 or 30 shown in the movie.

The film’s late-stage tension — Jordan agreeing to cooperate with the FBI while remaining reluctant to betray his former partners — is rooted in reality. After his arrest, he wore a wire during meetings with former associates and spent hours at a time debriefing investigators.

**Belfort’s ā€œcountry clubā€ prison**

As in the movie, Belfort served his 22-month sentence at the low-security Taft Correctional Institution. One former friend of Belfort’s describes it as a ā€œcountry club.ā€ What Scorsese’s film doesn’t show, however, is that one of Belfort’s fellow inmates was Tommy Chong of Cheech & Chong fame, who was serving a nine-month sentence for conspiring to sell drug paraphernalia. It was Chong, Belfort later revealed, who inspired him to write his 2007 memoir, *The Wolf of Wall Street*, which served as the basis for Scorsese’s film.

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