Wolf of Wall Street
Sexy Scene Coin inside Metal Tin

Uncirculated Gold Plated Commemorative Coin inside a Metal Padded Coin Tin

One side has the iconic famous nursey scene from the film "Wolf of Wall Street"
With Margot Robbie and Leonardo Dicaprio

The other side is the American Eagle Crest with the words "United States of America"

The coin is 40mm in diameter, weighs about  1 oz.
The metal tin is 25mm high and 70mm in diameter

Comes in air-tight acrylic coin holder

A Beautiful coin and Magnificent Keepsake Souvenir of  a Great Film

In Excellent Condition

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The Wolf of Wall Street
2013
18
3h
IMDb RATING
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)

The story of New York stockbroker Jordan Belfort. From the American dream to corporate greed, Belfort goes from penny stocks and righteousness to IPOs and a life of corruption in the late 80s.  Excess success and affluence in his early twenties as founder of the brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont warranted Belfort the title – “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Based on the true story of Jordan Belfort, from his rise to a wealthy stock-broker living the high life to his fall involving crime, corruption and the federal government.

Director
Martin Scorsese
Writers
Terence WinterJordan Belfort
Stars
Leonardo DiCaprioJonah HillMargot Robbie
See production info at IMDbPro
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1.8K
User reviews
436
Critic reviews
75
Metascore
Top rated movie #132
Nominated for 5 Oscars
37 wins & 179 nominations total
Videos
31
Trailer #2
Trailer 2:34
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The Wolf of Wall Street
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A Guide to the Films of Martin Scorsese
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Thomas Middleditch Wants Leonardo DiCaprio to Rock Him Like a Baby
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Exclusive Clip
Clip 0:56
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"You Work for Me"
Clip 1:01
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: First Day On Wall Street
Clip 0:29
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: You Make A Lot Of Money?
Clip 1:07
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: You Work For Me
Clip 0:56
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: Bribe
Clip 0:57
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The Wolf Of Wall Street: Nothing But Short Skirts
Clip 1:06
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Photos
704
Margot Robbie in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Kyle Chandler and Ted Griffin in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Jean Dujardin in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Jon Bernthal in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Leonardo DiCaprio and Margot Robbie in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Leonardo DiCaprio, P.J. Byrne, Jonah Hill, Cristin Milioti, Henry Zebrowski, and MacKenzie Meehan in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Matthew McConaughey in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)
Leonardo DiCaprio in The Wolf of Wall Street (2013)

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Top cast
Leonardo DiCaprio
Leonardo DiCaprio
Jordan Belfort
Jonah Hill
Jonah Hill
Donnie Azoff
Margot Robbie
Margot Robbie
Naomi Lapaglia
Matthew McConaughey
Matthew McConaughey
Mark Hanna
Kyle Chandler
Kyle Chandler
Agent Patrick Denham
Rob Reiner
Rob Reiner
Max Belfort
Jon Bernthal
Jon Bernthal
Brad
Jon Favreau
Jon Favreau
Manny Riskin
Jean Dujardin
Jean Dujardin
Jean Jacques Saurel
Joanna Lumley
Joanna Lumley
Aunt Emma
Cristin Milioti
Cristin Milioti
Teresa Petrillo
Christine Ebersole
Christine Ebersole
Leah Belfort
Shea Whigham
Shea Whigham
Captain Ted Beecham
Katarina Cas
Katarina Cas
Chantalle
P.J. Byrne
P.J. Byrne
Nicky Koskoff ('Rugrat')
Kenneth Choi
Kenneth Choi
Chester Ming
Brian Sacca
Brian Sacca
Robbie Feinberg ('Pinhead')
Henry Zebrowski
Henry Zebrowski
Alden Kupferberg ('Sea Otter')
Director
Martin Scorsese
Writers
Terence WinterJordan Belfort
All cast & crew
Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
What Scorsese Film Ranks Highest on IMDb?
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Storyline
Jordan Belfort (DiCaprio) is Long Island penny stockbroker who serves almost two years in prison for refusing to co-operate in a huge 1990s securities fraud case that involved widespread corruption on Wall Street and in the corporate banking world, including mob infiltration.
Plot summaryPlot synopsis
Taglines
Earn. Spend. Party.
Genres
BiographyComedyCrimeDrama
Certificate
18
Parents guide
Did you know
Trivia
The actors snorted crushed B vitamins for scenes that involved cocaine. Jonah Hill claimed that he eventually became sick with bronchitis after so much inhaling and had to be hospitalized.
Goofs
During the Black Monday crash of 1987 all of the digital tickers in the background are green - which means the market is going up.
Quotes
Jordan Belfort: Let me tell you something. There's no nobility in poverty. I have been a rich man and I have been a poor man. And I choose rich every fuckin' time. Because, at least as a rich man, when I have to face my problems, I show up in the back of the limo, wearing a $2000 suit and a $40,000 gold fuckin' watch.

Crazy credits
The film opens with a Stratton Oakmont advertisement hosted by Jordan Belfort. The film title appears only at the ending.
Alternate versions
News reports in local media have said the version of the movie showing in Abu Dhabi cinemas removes 45 minutes of content. Aside from nudity and sexual situations, most of the edits come from the film's 600+ curse words. Time Out Abu Dhabi reported offensive language was removed by "either by muting the audio temporarily or chopping chunks from scenes mid sentence, which produces a jarring effect for viewers."
Connections
Featured in The Daily Show: Jonah Hill (2013)
Soundtracks
Stratton Oakmont
Composed by Theodore Shapiro
User reviews
1.8K
FEATURED REVIEW
Entertainment, not reality

Yes, Scorsese has always entertained us so well with abberant types, from mobsters to street criminals to boiler room stock brokers, all dealing death or financial destruction 24/7. But, do any of them bear even a faint resemblance to what really happened, and did those people actually behave that way? Regarding this film, I worked on Wall Street during that time, and even though we had heard of Jordan Belfort's firm, it was totally discounted as a boiler room and had no Street cred at all, just a terrible rep as sleazebag junk. It was no more than a side story to the real Wall Street, as those boiler room types were the lowest level of that era's greed-is-good WS slicksters.

But, the movie.....could any human superman take the amount of drugs and unprotected sex shown in this story and even function, let alone at a high continuous level and not have a fatal heart attack? None that I have known or seen, and I have seen a lot. But, Dicaprio as Belfort was a marvelous choice for this outsized role, and he played it to the hilt as never before, with Jonah Hill as his sidekick comic relief, and Matthew Macconaughey a great choice for Belfort's oddball, probably whacked out(off?)mentor, and Bob DeNiro in a short mobster spot.

It was such fast action that the 3 hours went by quickly, with not a dull moment in it. I enjoyed the fantasy ride that Disney could not have done better, but I could never get past the fact that it was 99% dramatized fiction, done to sell tickets(greed is good!) but not to enlighten us at all about the real Wall Street of that era.

helpful
213

179

bobbobwhiteDec 26, 2013
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FAQ
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Details
Release date
January 17, 2014 (United Kingdom)
Country of origin
United States
Official site
Official Facebook
Languages
EnglishFrench
Also known as
Sói Già Phố Wall
Filming locations
Portofino, Genoa, Liguria, Italy(when Jordan and Naomi receive news of death of aunt Emma)
Production companies
Red Granite PicturesAppian WaySikelia Productions
See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
Budget
$100,000,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$116,900,694
Opening weekend US & Canada
$18,361,578Dec 29, 2013
Gross worldwide
$406,878,233
See detailed box office info on IMDbPro
Technical specs
Runtime
3 hours
Color
Color
Sound mix
DatasatDolby DigitalDolby Surround 7.1
Aspect ratio
2.39 : 1

Summaries
Based on the true story of Jordan Belfort, from his rise to a wealthy stock-broker living the high life to his fall involving crime, corruption and the federal government.
Jordan Belfort (DiCaprio) is Long Island penny stockbroker who serves almost two years in prison for refusing to co-operate in a huge 1990s securities fraud case that involved widespread corruption on Wall Street and in the corporate banking world, including mob infiltration.
Synopsis
Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio) narrates the film showing his monstrous success with his firm complete with ribaldry at work, a sumptuous home on the Gold Coast of Long Island and a trophy wife who is a former model. He then flashes back to 1987, where he began a low-level job at an established Wall Street firm. His boss Mark Hanna (Matthew McConaughey) advises him to adopt a lifestyle of casual sex and cocaine to succeed. However, shortly after he passes his exam to become a certified stockbroker, he loses his job on account of the firm's bankruptcy as a result of Black Monday.

Now unemployed in an economy that is unaccommodating to stockbrokers and sufficiently discouraged to consider a new line of work, Jordan's wife Teresa (Cristin Milioti) encourages him to take a job with a Long Island boiler room dealing in penny stocks, which are also largely ignored by regulators. Belfort impresses his new boss with his aggressive pitching style, and earns a small fortune for the boiler room and himself as penny stocks have a much higher commission than blue chips. Jordan also befriends Donnie Azoff (Jonah Hill), a salesman living in the same apartment complex and they decide to go into business together. To facilitate this, his accountant parents are recruited as well as several of Jordan's friends, some of them experienced marijuana dealers. The basic method of the firm is a pump and dump scam. To cloak this, Belfort gives the firm the respectable WASP like sounding name of Stratton Oakmont. An article in Forbes dubs Jordan the "Wolf of Wall Street", and soon hundreds of ambitious young financiers flock to his company.

A decadent lifestyle of lavish parties, sex and drugs follows. Jordan regularly uses prostitutes and becomes addicted to cocaine and Quaaludes. FBI Agent Patrick Denham (Kyle Chandler) begins investigating Stratton Oakmont. When Jordan meets Naomi Lapaglia (Margot Robbie) at one of his parties, he begins an affair with her, resulting in his divorce from Teresa. Jordan makes Naomi his second wife in an extravagant wedding and gives her a yacht aptly named Naomi, and soon they have a daughter, Skylar.

Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission works jointly with the FBI to intensify the Stratton Oakmont investigation. Jordan instantly makes US$22 million on his securing the IPO of Steve Madden Ltd. To hide his money, Jordan opens a Swiss bank account with the corrupt banker Jean-Jacques Saurel (Jean Dujardin) in the name of Naomi's aunt Emma (Joanna Lumley), who is a British citizen and outside the reach of American authorities. He uses friends with European passports to smuggle cash to Switzerland. When Donnie gets into a public fight with Brad Bodnick (Jon Bernthal), who is one of their money couriers, and Brad is arrested, their scheme is nearly exposed.

Donnie offers Jordan a powerful brand of Quaaludes, hoping to ease the sting of the bad news. The pills are old and seem to have lost their potency, so they take huge doses to compensate. Jordan then receives a call from Bo Dietl, his private investigator, who insists Jordan call him back from a payphone. Jordan drives to a country club to phone Bo, who warns Jordan of Brad's arrest and that his house phone has been wiretapped. At this point, the Quaaludes finally kick in with overwhelming effect. Severely debilitated, Jordan drives back home to prevent Donnie from using his phone. When Jordan arrives home Donnie (who is also high) is on the phone with Saurel. Jordan fights Donnie to make him get off the phone and tells him he found out what happened between him and Brad. Donnie starts choking on ham and nearly suffocates. Jordan snorts cocaine to counteract the effect of the Quaaludes in order to help save Donnie's life.

With the shadow of law enforcement hanging over them, Jordan's father Max (Rob Reiner) attempts to convince his son to step down from Stratton Oakmont and escape the large amount of legal penalties. However, during his leaving party at the office, Jordan changes his mind and to the great acclaim of his employees vows to stay on.

Jordan, Donnie and their wives on a yacht trip to Italy learn that Emma has died of a heart attack. Over his grieving wife's objections, Jordan decides to sail to Monaco so they can drive to Switzerland without getting their passports stamped at the border and settle the bank account, but a violent storm capsizes their yacht. After their rescue, the plane sent to take them to Geneva is destroyed by a seagull flying into the engine, exploding and killing three people. Witnessing this, Jordan considers this a sign from God and decides to sober up.

Two years later, Denham arrests Jordan during the filming of an infomercial. Saurel, arrested in Florida over an unrelated charge, has told the FBI everything. Since the evidence against him is overwhelming, Jordan agrees to gather evidence on his colleagues in exchange for leniency.

Jordan is optimistic about his sentencing but after one last bout of sex, Naomi tells Jordan she will divorce him and wants full custody of their children. Jordan throws a violent tantrum, gets high, and ends up crashing his car in his driveway during an attempt to abscond with their daughter.

The next morning, Jordan wears a wire to work. Jordan silently slips Donnie a note warning him about the wire. The note finds its way to Agent Denham, who arrests Jordan for breaching his cooperation deal. The FBI raids and shuts down Stratton Oakmont. Despite this one breach, Jordan receives a much reduced sentence for his testimony and is sentenced to 36 months in a minimum security prison in Nevada. After his release, Jordan makes a living hosting seminars on sales technique.

1980s
1990s
20th century
22 year old
22 year old man
24 year old
24 year old woman
26 year old
26 year old man
35 year old
35 year old man
555 phone number
absurdism
actor plays himself
actor shares first name with character
adderall
adultery
african lion
air conditioning
airline stewardess
airplane
alcohol
alcoholic
alcoholism
american abroad
american flag
american in the uk
amish
amnesia phase
anal sex
anger
animal in title
ankle bracelet
ankle monitor
answering machine
anti hero
anxiety
apartment
apology
applause
aquarium
armani suit
arrest
attempted bribery
attorney
attraction
auckland new zealand
aunt nephew relationship
aunt niece relationship
bacchanal
bachelor party
bad lover
bag of money
bahamas
bail
bank
banker
bar
barefoot female
barter
based on book
based on real person
bathtub
baton twirler
beach
beach house
beating
bed
beer
beer pong
bento box
bespoke suit
betrayal
big ben london
bikini
bitch slap
black monday
blood
blood splatter
bloody face
boat
boat captain
boiler room
boxer shorts
brass band
brassiere
breaking the fourth wall
bribe
bribery
bride and groom
briefcase
briefcase full of money
british
british accent
brokerage firm
brooklyn bridge
brooklyn new york city
brookville country club
brother brother relationship
bruise
buddhist
bull
bullseye
bus to prison
business
business associate
business ethics
business venture
businessman
butler
butt slap
cafe
cameo appearance
cameo appearance by real life subject
candle
candle wax
capsizing ship
car
car accident
car crash
cardiopulmonary resuscitation
career change
cartoon on tv
caught masturbating
caviar
celebration
cell phone
cerebral palsy phase
chamomile
champagne
chanting
character repeats someone else's dialogue
character's point of view camera shot
chauffeured limousine
cheating
check
child custody
child in jeopardy
choking
cigar smoking
cigarette
cigarette smoking
cleaning a fish bowl
close up of eyes
clothed female naked female scene
clothed male naked female scene
cocaine
comedic scene
commission
computer
con artist
condom
conference room
conference table
confetti
conspiracy
controversy
corporate corruption
corporate fraud
corporate greed
corruption
country club
court
courthouse
courtroom
cousin cousin relationship
crack cocaine
crash land helicopter
crawling
crawling on the floor
credit card
criminal
crooked businessman
cult film
cunnilingus
customs
customs interview
dance on a yacht
dancer
dancing
dark comedy
dartboard
day in court
deal
debauchery
debt
decadence
deception
defendent
delayed fuse
delayed reaction
delete key
delorean
desktop computer
desperation
diamond bracelet
diamond necklace
dicaprio and hill
diner
disco
disguise
divorce
dog
dog barks
domestic violence
dominatrix
double team
douchebag
doughnut
drink
drink thrown into someone's face
drinking
drinking straw
driving under the influence
drool phase
drug
drug addict
drug addiction
drug dealer
drug material
drug snorting
drug use
drugged
drugs
drunk driving
drunkenness
duchess
dud
dumb blonde
dysfunctional marriage
earl grey tea
eating
eating a live goldfish
elevator
enema
enforcer
engagement ring
erection
escape
escape attempt
ethnic slur
eurocopter as350 squirrel
eurocopter as355 twin squirrel
european passport
eviction
evidence
ex policeman
excess
exercycle
exploding airplane
extramarital affair
extreme close up
eyeglasses
f word
fake accent
fake commercial
falling down stairs
falling into a pool
falling into a swimming pool
father daughter relationship
father son kiss
father son relationship
fax machine
fbi agent
fbi federal bureau of investigation
fbi raid
fear
federal prison
fellatio
fellatio in a car
fellatio in an elevator
fellatio while driving
female frontal nudity
female full frontal nudity
female journalist
female judge
female nudity
female pubic hair
female rear nudity
females skinny dipping in a pool
feng shui
ferrari car
ferrari testarossa
fictional tv commercial
fight
finance
financial deregulation
financial drama
financial ruin
finger placed down throat
fired from a job
firing range
first cousin
first person narration
first wife
fish tank
fishbowl
five word title
fix
flaming onion
flash forward
flashback
flight attendant
flood
food
forbes magazine
forgery
fortune
fraud
fraudster
freeze frame
french
french language spoken
french swiss
friend
friendship
fugazi
furniture salesman
gay
gay butler
gay character
gay orgy
gay sex
gay slur
geneva switzerland
gestapo
gold coast
gold watch
goldfish
golf
golf cart
golf club
golf course
gossip
greed
grenada
guilt
gun
hair piece
handcuffs
handgun
hands held in the air
hangover
harassment
hard helicopter landing
hatred
heart attack
heart bypass surgery
heavy rain
hedonism
helicopter
helicopter accident
helicopter pilot
heroin
hibachi grill
hidden camera
hidden gun
high on drugs
hit in the face
home gym
homophobia
homosexual
horn rimmed glasses
horse
horse farm
horseback riding
hot candle wax during sex
hotel
hotel room
hundred dollar bill
husband wife relationship
hypocrite
idealism
idealist
imitating fellatio
immorality
incest
incompetence
infant
infidelity
infomercial
inner thoughts
insanity
inspired by a true story
intern
interrogation
interrupted sex
interview
investigation
ipo
italian american
italian car
italian navy
italian riviera
italy
jaguar e type
jaguar the car
jail
jail time
japanese restaurant
jasmine
jet ski
jewelry
jewish american
jewish slur
job applicant
journalist
judge
junkie
justification
kicking
kidnapping
kiss
kissing someone's breasts
knife
kodak
lamborghini
lamborghini countach
las vegas nevada
latvian
law student
lawyer
lemon
lesbian
lesbian sex
lgbt
lie
lightning
limousine
lion
little girl
little person
lobster
lobster as food
london england
long island new york
long take
looking at oneself in a mirror
losing a job
love
luck
lust
magazine article
maid
majorette
male african lion
male frontal nudity
male male kiss
male police officer
male protagonist
man punches a woman
management
manager
manhattan new york city
mania
manic behavior
manic depression
manipulation
mansion
marching band
marijuana
marijuana joint
marital rape
market manipulation
marriage
marriage between cousins
marriage proposal
married to first cousin
masturbating in public
masturbation joke
mayday
media
media frenzy
mediterranean sea
megaphone
men's bathroom
mentor
metal detector
miami florida
microphone
mile high club
millionaire
mirror
money
money counter
money laundering
montage
moral ambiguity
morning after
morphine
mortgage
mother daughter relationship
motivational speaker
mouth to mouth resuscitation
movie camera
mugshot
mustached man
n word
name calling
nanny cam
napkin
narrated by character
narrated flashback
nasdaq stock market
near death experience
near drowning
nemesis
new york city
new york stock exchange
new york stock exchange building
newspaper
newspaper article
newspaper headline
newspaper photo
no opening credits
no panties
no title at beginning
non alcoholic beer
nonlinear timeline
nosebleed
nude female group
nudity
obscene finger gesture
office
office worker
olive
oral sex
orange juice
orgasm
orgy
overhead camera shot
panic
panties
paranoia
party
passing out
passport
pay phone
paying for sex
pellet gun
pen
penicillin shot
penny stock
pep talk
phone booth
phone tap
photograph
pile of money
pill popping
pills
pink slip
playboy
playing tennis
Plot keywords
pole dancer
police
police car
police officer
pool party
pool table
popeye music
pounding one's chest like tarzan
prank
pregnancy
premature ejaculation
prison
prison bus
prisoner
private investigator
promiscuity
promiscuous woman
promise
prostitute
prostitution
pubic hair
public masturbation
public nudity
public urination
publicity
pump and dump
punched in the chest
punched in the face
punched in the mouth
punched in the stomach
python
quaalude
quitting a job
racial slur
rags to riches
rainstorm
raised middle finger
rape
rat
rathole
reading a newspaper
realtor
reckless driving
reference to captain ahab
reference to coco chanel
reference to delorean motor company
reference to don johnson
reference to george washington
reference to gianni versace
reference to giorgio armani
reference to gordon gekko
reference to james bond
reference to jimmy buffett
reference to popeye
reference to robin hood
reference to steve madden
reference to tarzan
reference to warren buffett
reference to willy wonka
reference to wolfgang amadeus mozart
reference to yves saint laurent
repeated scene
reporter
rescue
restaurant
restitution
revenge
rise and fall
rise to power
rolling on the ground
rooftop
rosehips tea
round table
running
running a business
sales meeting
sales training
salesman
sashimi
satire comedy
saving a life
scam
scar
scene told from more than one perspective
scheme
scorsese and dicaprio
screwdriver
second chance
second wife
securities exchange commission
securities manipulation
security camera
security guard
sedative
selfishness
seminar
sense of smell
series seven
sex addict
sex in a limousine
sex in a taxi
sex in an elevator
sex in an office
sex in bed
sex in public
sex in restroom
sex on an airplane
sex scene
sex standing up
sex toy
sex with a prostitute
sex with first cousin
sex with multiple partners
sexual attraction
shaving head
ship
ship captain
shipwreck
shoe designer
shopping mall
shrimp
single mother
single parent
skateboard
skinny dipping
slapped in the face
slipped disc
slovakian
slovenian
slow motion scene
slurring one's words
smoking marijuana
smuggling
snorting cocaine
snorting cocaine off a naked woman
snorting cocaine off someone's body
spanish language spoken
spiral staircase
spoken inner thoughts
sports car
spousal abuse
stand alone movie without sequel
std sexually transmitted disease
steam room
steve madden
stock boy
stock manipulation
stock market
stock market crash
stock market manipulation
stock shares
stock tip
stockbroker
stocktrader
storm at sea
strip club
strip mall
stripper
striptease
student loan
subjective camera
subpoena
subway
suicide
sunbathing
sunglasses
superstar
surprise ending
surveillance camera
sushi
swallowing a goldfish
sweatpants
swimming pool
swindle
swiss accent
swiss bank
swiss bank account
swiss banker
swiss culture
swiss passport
switzerland
tailor
tailor made clothing
talking during sex
talking to the audience
talking to the camera
tattoo
taxi
taxi driver
tea
teacher
teaching
teddy bear
telephone
telephone call
telephone cord
tennis
tennis bracelet
tennis court
testicles
testimony
testosterone
the hamptons long island new york
The Wolf of Wall Street
theft
threesome
throwing a kiss
throwing a little person
throwing a lobster
throwing a wristwatch
throwing water onto someone
tidal wave
tingle phase
title appears in writing
title at the end
title spoken by character
told in flashback
toupee
training
treadmill
trial
triple bypass surgery
troubled marriage
true crime
trying to start a fire
tv advertisement
tv commercial
u.s. criminal code
u.s. justice department
u.s. securities and exchange commission
underwear
unfaithful husband
unfaithfulness
united states of america
urination
vagina
valium
victim
video monitor
villain arrested
villain as protagonist
violence
voice over narration
vomiting
vulgarity
vulture capitalist
wall street manhattan new york city
watching tv
wealth
wearing a sound wire
wearing a wire
wedding
wedding guest list
wedding photograph
wedding video
wedding videographer
weightlifting
whiskey
white bra
white collar crime
white lamborghini
white panties
wife slaps her husband
wiretapping
withholding sex
woman slaps a man
women's shoes
workout
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Leonardo DiCaprio

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"DiCaprio" redirects here. For his father, see George DiCaprio. For the football player, see Dicaprio Bootle.
Leonardo DiCaprio
Leonardo DiCaprio looking away from the camera
DiCaprio in 2019
Born Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio

November 11, 1974 (age 49)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupations

    Actorfilm producer

Years active 1989–present
Organizations

    Appian Way Productions
    Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation

Works Full list
Title United Nations Messenger of Peace (designated 2014)
Partners

    Gisele Bündchen (2000–2005)
    Bar Refaeli (2005–2011)
    Camila Morrone (2017–2022)

Parent

    George DiCaprio (father)

Awards Full list
Website

    leonardodicaprio.org

Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio (/diˈkæprioʊ, dɪ-/; Italian: [diˈkaːprjo]; born November 11, 1974) is an American actor and film producer. Known for his work in biographical and period films, he is the recipient of numerous accolades, including an Academy Award, a British Academy Film Award, and three Golden Globe Awards. As of 2019, his films have grossed over $7.2 billion worldwide, and he has been placed eight times in annual rankings of the world's highest-paid actors.

Born in Los Angeles, DiCaprio began his career in the late 1980s by appearing in television commercials. In the early 1990s, he had recurring roles in various television shows, such as the sitcom Parenthood, and had his first major film part as author Tobias Wolff in This Boy's Life (1993). He received critical acclaim and his first Academy Award and Golden Globe Award nominations for his performance as a developmentally disabled boy in What's Eating Gilbert Grape (1993). DiCaprio achieved international stardom with the star-crossed romances Romeo + Juliet (1996) and Titanic (1997). After the latter became the highest-grossing film in the world at the time, he reduced his workload for a few years. In an attempt to shed his image of a romantic hero, DiCaprio sought roles in other genres, including the 2002 crime dramas Catch Me If You Can and Gangs of New York; the latter marked the first of his many successful collaborations with director Martin Scorsese.

DiCaprio continued to gain acclaim for his performances in the biopic The Aviator (2004), the political thriller Blood Diamond (2006), the crime drama The Departed (2006) and the romantic drama Revolutionary Road (2008). He later made environmental documentaries and starred in several high-profile directors' successful projects, including the action thriller Inception (2010), the western Django Unchained (2012), the biopic The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), the survival drama The Revenant (2015)—for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor— the comedy-dramas Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019) and Don't Look Up (2021), and the crime drama Killers of the Flower Moon (2023).

DiCaprio is the founder of Appian Way Productions—a production company that has made some of his films and the documentary series Greensburg (2008–2010)—and the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, a nonprofit organization devoted to promoting environmental awareness. A United Nations Messenger of Peace, he regularly supports charitable causes. In 2005, he was named a Commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres for his contributions to the arts, and in 2016, he appeared in Time magazine's 100 most influential people in the world. DiCaprio was voted one of the 50 greatest actors of all time in a 2022 readers' poll by Empire.
Early life and acting background

Leonardo Wilhelm DiCaprio was born on November 11, 1974, in Los Angeles, California.[1] He is the only child of Irmelin Indenbirken, a legal secretary, and George DiCaprio, an underground comix artist and distributor; they met while attending college and moved to Los Angeles after graduating.[2][3] His mother is German and his father is of Italian and German descent.[4] His maternal grandfather, Wilhelm Indenbirken, was German,[5] and his maternal grandmother, Helene Indenbirken, was a Russian immigrant living in Germany.[6] DiCaprio was raised Catholic.[7] Sources have falsely claimed his maternal grandmother was born in Odesa, Ukraine; there is no evidence that DiCaprio has any relatives of Ukrainian birth or heritage.[8]

DiCaprio's parents named him Leonardo because his pregnant mother first felt him kick while she was looking at a Leonardo da Vinci painting in the Uffizi museum in Florence, Italy.[9] When DiCaprio was one year old, his parents divorced after his father fell in love with another woman and moved out.[10][11] To raise him together, his parents moved into twin cottages with a shared garden in Echo Park, Los Angeles.[10][12] DiCaprio's father lived with his girlfriend and her son, Adam Farrar, with whom DiCaprio developed a close bond.[13] DiCaprio and his mother later moved to other neighborhoods, such as Los Feliz.[14] He has described his parents as "bohemian in every sense of the word" and as "the people I trust the most in the world".[15] DiCaprio has stated that he grew up poor in a neighborhood plagued with prostitution, crime and violence.[16] Attending the Los Angeles Center for Enriched Studies for four years and later the Seeds Elementary School, he later enrolled at the John Marshall High School.[17][18] DiCaprio disliked public school and wanted to audition for acting jobs instead.[16] He dropped out of high school later, eventually earning a general equivalency diploma.[19]

As a child, DiCaprio wanted to become either a marine biologist or an actor. He eventually favored the latter; he liked impersonating characters and imitating people, and enjoyed seeing their reactions to his acting.[20] According to DiCaprio, his interest in performing began at the age of two when he went onto the stage at a performance festival and danced spontaneously to a positive response from the crowd.[21] He was also motivated to learn acting when Farrar's appearance in a television commercial earned him $50,000.[22] DiCaprio has said in interviews that his first television appearance was in the children's series Romper Room, and that he was dismissed from the show for being disruptive. The show's host has denied that any children were removed from the show in this way.[23][24] At 14, he began appearing in several commercials for Matchbox cars, which he calls his first role.[23] DiCaprio later appeared in commercials for Kraft Singles, Bubble Yum and Apple Jacks.[25] In 1989, he played the role of Glen in two episodes of the television show The New Lassie.[26]

At the beginning of his career, DiCaprio had difficulty finding an agent. When he found one, the agent suggested DiCaprio change his name to Lenny Williams to appeal to American audiences, which he declined to do.[27] DiCaprio remained jobless for a year and a half, although he had 100 auditions. Following this lack of success, DiCaprio was going to give up acting but his father persuaded him to persevere. Motivated by his father and by the prospect of financial security, he continued to audition. After a talent agent, who knew his mother's friend, recommended him to casting directors, DiCaprio secured roles in about 20 commercials.[28]

By the early 1990s, DiCaprio began acting regularly on television, starting with a role in the pilot of The Outsiders (1990) and one episode of the soap opera Santa Barbara (1990), in which he played a teenage alcoholic.[29] DiCaprio's career prospects improved when he was cast in Parenthood, a series based on the 1989 comedy film of the same name. To prepare for the role of Garry Buckman, a troubled teenager, he analyzed Joaquin Phoenix's performance in the original film.[30] His work that year earned him two nominations at the 12th Youth in Film Awards—Best Young Actor in a Daytime Series for Santa Barbara and Best Young Actor Starring in a New Television Series for Parenthood.[31] Around this time, he was a contestant on the children's game show Fun House, on which he performed several stunts, including catching the fish inside a small pool using only his teeth.[32][33]
Career
1991–1996: Early work and breakthrough

DiCaprio made his film debut later that year as the stepson of an unscrupulous landlord in the low-budget horror sequel Critters 3 – a part he later described as "your average, no-depth, standard kid with blond hair".[34] DiCaprio has stated that he prefers not to remember Critters 3, viewing it as "possibly one of the worst films of all time" and the kind of role he wanted to avoid in the future.[35] Later in 1991, he became a recurring cast member on the sitcom Growing Pains, playing Luke Brower, a homeless boy who is taken in by the show's central family.[36] Co-star Joanna Kerns recalls DiCaprio being "especially intelligent and disarming for his age" but she noted that he was also mischievous and jocular on set, and often made fun of his co-stars.[37] DiCaprio was cast by the producers to appeal to young female audience, but his arrival did not improve the show's ratings and he left before the end of its run.[38] He was nominated for a Young Artist Award for Best Young Actor Co-starring in a Television Series.[39] DiCaprio also had an uncredited role in 1991 in one episode of Roseanne.[40]
Lasse Hallström holding a mic in his left hand and looking away from the camera
Lasse Hallström directed DiCaprio in What's Eating Gilbert Grape (1993), for which he earned his first Academy Award nomination.

In 1992, DiCaprio had a brief role in the first installment of the Poison Ivy film series,[41] and was handpicked by Robert De Niro from a shortlist of 400 young actors to co-star with him in This Boy's Life. Adapted from the memoir by Tobias Wolff, the film focuses on the relationship between a rebellious teenager, Toby (DiCaprio), and his mother (Ellen Barkin) and abusive stepfather (De Niro).[23][42][43] Director Michael Caton-Jones said that DiCaprio did not know how to behave on set; accordingly, Caton-Jones used a strict mentoring style, after which DiCaprio's behavior began to improve.[37] Bilge Ebiri of Rolling Stone found that the powerful bond between Barkin and DiCaprio elevated the film, praising DiCaprio's portrayal of his character's complex growth from a rebellious teen to an independent young man.[41] This Boy's Life was the first film that gained him recognition.[44]

DiCaprio played the developmentally disabled brother of Johnny Depp's character in What's Eating Gilbert Grape (1993), a comedy-drama about a dysfunctional Iowa family. Caton-Jones recommended DiCaprio to director Lasse Hallström, but he was initially skeptical, as he considered DiCaprio too good-looking for the part. Hallström cast DiCaprio after he emerged as "the most observant" auditionee.[34][37] To ensure authenticity in his portrayal, DiCaprio studied similarly impaired children and their mannerisms, and Hallström allowed him to create the character using his own researched attributes.[45] The film became a critical success.[46] At 19, DiCaprio earned a National Board of Review Award, as well as nominations for a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, making him the seventh-youngest Oscar nominee in the category.[47][48] "The film's real show-stopping turn comes from Mr. DiCaprio," wrote New York Times critic Janet Maslin, "who makes Arnie's many tics so startling and vivid that at first he is difficult to watch. The performance has a sharp, desperate intensity from beginning to end."[49] Caryn James, also writing for The New York Times, said of his performances in This Boy's Life and What's Eating Gilbert Grape: "He made the raw, emotional neediness of those boys completely natural and powerful."[50]

DiCaprio's first role of 1995 was in Sam Raimi's Western The Quick and the Dead. When Sony Pictures became dubious over DiCaprio's casting, co-star Sharon Stone paid his salary herself.[51] The film was released to dismal box office performance and mixed reviews from critics.[52][53] DiCaprio next starred as a teenage Jim Carroll, a drug-addicted high school basketball player and budding writer, in the biopic The Basketball Diaries.[54] He starred in the erotic drama Total Eclipse (1995), driven by the desire to showcase an exceptional performance, which would focus on his acting talent rather than his much-discussed physical appeal.[55] Directed by Agnieszka Holland, it is a fictionalized account of the same-sex relationship between Arthur Rimbaud (DiCaprio) and Paul Verlaine (David Thewlis). DiCaprio was cast when River Phoenix died before filming began.[10] Although the film failed commercially,[56] it has been included in the catalog of the Warner Archive Collection, which releases classic and cult films from Warner Bros.' library on home video.[57] A review in the San Francisco Chronicle called DiCaprio "his generation's great acting promise" but criticized the mismatch between Thewlis's "cultivated" British accent and DiCaprio's "Southern California twang".[58]

DiCaprio next starred opposite Claire Danes in Baz Luhrmann's Romeo + Juliet (1996), an abridged modernization of William Shakespeare's romantic tragedy, which retained the original Shakespearean dialogue. DiCaprio was initially unsure about another Romeo and Juliet adaptation, but at his father's suggestion, he agreed to examine Luhrmann's work more closely. DiCaprio and Luhrmann then spent a two-week workshop exchanging ideas, which led to the collaboration.[59] Romeo + Juliet established DiCaprio as a leading Hollywood actor; according to film scholar Murray Pomerance, DiCaprio's newfound popularity helped the film become profitable only days after its release.[60][61] Reviewing DiCaprio's early works, David Thomson of The Guardian called DiCaprio "a revelation" in What's Eating Gilbert Grape, "very moving" in This Boy's Life, "suitably desperate" in The Basketball Diaries and "a vital spark" in Romeo + Juliet.[62] The latter earned DiCaprio a Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 1997 Berlin International Film Festival.[63] He then portrayed a young man who has been committed to a mental asylum in Marvin's Room (1996), a family drama about two estranged sisters, played by Meryl Streep and Diane Keaton, who are reunited through tragedy. He played Hank, the troubled son of Streep's character.[64] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly praised "the deeply gifted DiCaprio" for holding his own against veteran actresses Keaton and Streep, describing the three as "full-bodied and so powerfully affecting that you're carried along on the pleasure of being in the presence of their extraordinary talent".[65]
1997–2001: Titanic and worldwide recognition
"Leo-mania" redirects here.

DiCaprio rejected a role in Boogie Nights (1997) to star opposite Kate Winslet in James Cameron's Titanic as members of different social classes who fall in love aboard RMS Titanic during its ill-fated maiden voyage.[66] DiCaprio initially had doubts, but was eventually encouraged by Cameron to pursue the part.[67] With a production budget of more than $200 million, including DiCaprio's $40 million salary,[68] the film was the most expensive in history at the time, and was shot at Rosarito, Baja California where a replica of the ship was created.[69] Titanic became the highest-grossing film at the time, eventually earning more than $2.1 billion in box-office receipts worldwide.[a] The role of Jack Dawson transformed DiCaprio into a superstar, resulting in intense adoration among teenage girls and young women that became known as "Leo-mania".[72][73] The film won 11 Academy Awards—the most wins for any film – including Best Picture, but DiCaprio's failure to gain a nomination led to a protest against the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) by more than 200 fans.[74][75] He was nominated for other high-profile awards, including a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor.[76]
A photograph of Leonardo DiCaprio attending a press conference for The Beach.
DiCaprio at a press conference for The Beach in 2000

DiCaprio stated in 2000: "I have no connection with me during that whole Titanic phenomenon and what my face became around the world [...] I'll never reach that state of popularity again, and I don't expect to [...] It's not something I'm going to try to achieve either."[77] In his 2015 Rolling Stone article, Ebiri called the role DiCaprio's best, writing that he and Winslet "infuse their earnest back-and-forth with so much genuine emotion that it's hard not to get swept up in their doomed love affair."[41] A writer for Vanity Fair in 2008 similarly labeled them "Hollywood's most iconic screen couple" since Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman.[78] Essaying her first viewing of the film in 2017, Vox contributor Alissa Wilkinson took note of DiCaprio's "boyish charm" and found his performance "natural and unaffected".[79] The success of Titanic intensified DiCaprio's standing as a teen idol and romantic lead, an image from which he sought to dissociate himself.[73] He reduced his workload "to learn to hear [his] own voice in choosing the roles" that he wanted to pursue.[80]

DiCaprio had a brief featured role in Woody Allen's 1998 satire of fame, Celebrity. Ebiri labeled DiCaprio "the best thing in the film".[41][81] That year, he also took on the dual roles of villainous King Louis XIV and his secret, sympathetic twin brother Philippe in Randall Wallace's The Man in the Iron Mask, with common elements from the 1939 film of the same name and a 1929 film with Douglas Fairbanks.[82] It received mixed to negative reviews,[83] but grossed $180 million against a budget of $35 million.[84][85] Entertainment Weekly critic Owen Gleiberman wrote that DiCaprio did not look old enough to play the part, but praised him as "a fluid and instinctive actor, with the face of a mischievous angel".[86] The Guardian's Alex von Tunzelmann was similarly impressed with the actor's performance but found his talent wasted in the film.[87] DiCaprio won a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screen Couple for the dual roles in 1999.[88]

Also in 1998, DiCaprio was cast to star in American Psycho (2000) for a reported salary of $20 million; after disagreements with Oliver Stone on the film's direction, DiCaprio left the project, taking the lead role in The Beach instead.[89] Adapted from Alex Garland's 1996 novel, the film saw him play a backpacking American tourist who ends up in a secret island commune in the Gulf of Thailand.[90] Budgeted at $50 million, the film earned almost three times that at the box office,[91] but was negatively reviewed by critics, and earned him a nomination for the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actor.[92][93] Todd McCarthy of Variety thought DiCaprio gave a compelling performance but his character lacked defining qualities.[94] The film received criticism for damaging the filming location in Thailand, after which DiCaprio worked to restore the area.[95]

In the mid-1990s, DiCaprio agreed to be in the mostly improvised black-and-white short film Don's Plum as a favor to aspiring director R. D. Robb.[23] When Robb expanded it to a full-length film, DiCaprio and co-star Tobey Maguire had its release blocked in the US and Canada by court order, arguing they never intended to make a feature film. The film premiered at the 2001 Berlin International Film Festival but remains obscure.[96]
2002–2009: Venture into film production
See also: Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio and Appian Way Productions
A photograph Leonardo DiCaprio with Martin Scorsese and Cameron Diaz (from left to right) surrounded by the paparazzi
DiCaprio attending an event for Gangs of New York with Martin Scorsese and Cameron Diaz at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival

DiCaprio turned down the role of Anakin Skywalker in Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (2002), feeling unprepared to "take that dive" at the time.[97] His first film that year was the biopic Catch Me If You Can, based on the life of Frank Abagnale Jr., who before his 19th birthday committed check fraud to make millions in the 1960s.[98] Directed by Steven Spielberg, the film was shot across 147 different locations in 52 days, making it "the most adventurous, super-charged movie-making" DiCaprio had experienced yet.[99] The film received critical acclaim and grossed $355 million against a budget of $52 million, becoming his second highest-grossing release after Titanic.[100][101] Roger Ebert praised his departure from dark and troubled characters,[98] and two Entertainment Weekly critics in 2018 called it DiCaprio's best role, labeling him "delightfully persuasive, deceptive, flirtatious, and sometimes tragic—and we dare you to find a better role, if you can".[102] DiCaprio received his third Golden Globe nomination for his performance in the film.[103]

Also in 2002, DiCaprio starred in Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York, a historical drama set in the mid-19th century in the Five Points district of New York City. Scorsese initially struggled selling his idea of realizing the film until DiCaprio became interested in starring in the film, and thus Miramax Films got involved with financing the project. Nonetheless, production on the film was plagued by overshooting of budgets and producer-director disagreements, resulting in an eight-month shoot. With a budget of $103 million, the film was the most expensive Scorsese had ever made. DiCaprio was drawn to playing Amsterdam Vallon, the young leader of an Irish-American street gang, as it marked a shift from "boyish" roles to a mature leading man.[104] Gangs of New York earned $193 million worldwide and received positive critical response.[105][106] Anne Thompson of The Observer took note of DiCaprio's "low-key, sturdy performance", but felt that co-star Daniel Day-Lewis overshadowed him.[107]

In 2004, DiCaprio founded the production company Appian Way Productions, a namesake of the Italian road.[108] He was interested in finding unique source material and preserving its essence during development, citing previous experiences where the involvement of too many people influenced the final product in a negative way.[109] DiCaprio first executive-produced The Assassination of Richard Nixon, which starred Sean Penn as Samuel Byck,[40] and was screened at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.[110] DiCaprio and Scorsese reunited for a biopic of Howard Hughes, an American film director and aviation pioneer suffering from obsessive–compulsive disorder, in The Aviator (2004), which DiCaprio also co-produced under Appian Way. He initially developed the project with Michael Mann who was eventually replaced by Scorsese.[111][112] The Aviator became a critical and financial success, grossing $213 million against its budget of $110 million.[113][114] Simond Braund of Empire thought DiCaprio convincingly played a complex role and highlighted the scenes depicting Hughes's paranoia and obsession.[115] He received his first Golden Globe Award for Best Actor — Motion Picture Drama and nominations for an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award.[116]

In 2006, DiCaprio starred in the crime film The Departed and the political war thriller Blood Diamond. In Scorsese's The Departed, DiCaprio played the role of Billy Costigan, a state trooper working undercover in the Irish Mob in Boston, someone he characterizes as being in a "constant 24-hour panic attack". DiCaprio especially liked the experience of working with co-star Jack Nicholson, describing a scene with him as "one of the most memorable moments" of his life as an actor.[117] In preparation, he visited Boston to interact with people associated with the Irish Mob and gained 15 pounds (6.8 kg) of muscle.[118] Critically acclaimed,[119] the film grossed $291 million against a budget of $90 million, becoming DiCaprio and Scorsese's highest-grossing collaboration to that point.[120][101] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone praised DiCaprio's and co-star Matt Damon's performances as "explosive, emotionally complex", but felt that Nicholson overshadowed the two.[121] Despite DiCaprio's leading role in The Departed, the film's distributor Warner Bros. Pictures submitted his performance for a Best Supporting Actor nomination at the AMPAS to avoid internal conflict with his part in Blood Diamond.[122] Instead, his co-star Mark Wahlberg was nominated, though DiCaprio earned other accolades for The Departed, including a Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor and Best Actor nominations at the Golden Globes and BAFTA Awards.[123]
A picture of Leonardo DiCaprio in a dark suit
DiCaprio at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival

In Blood Diamond, DiCaprio starred as a diamond smuggler from Rhodesia who is involved in the Sierra Leone Civil War. While filming, he worked with 24 orphaned children from the SOS Children's Village in Maputo, Mozambique, and said he was touched by his interactions with them.[124] To prepare, he spent six months in Africa, learned about camouflage from people in South African military and interviewed and recorded people in the country to improve his accent.[125] The film received generally favorable reviews,[126] and DiCaprio was noted for his South African accent, which is generally known as difficult to imitate.[127] Claudia Puig of the USA Today approvingly highlighted DiCaprio's transition from a boy to a man on screen,[128] and Ann Hornaday of The Washington Post similarly noted his growth as an actor since The Departed.[129] DiCaprio received nominations for an Academy Award and a Golden Globe for Blood Diamond.[123]

In 2007, DiCaprio produced the comedy drama Gardener of Eden, which according to The Hollywood Reporter's Frank Scheck "lack[ed] the necessary dramatic urgency or black humor to connect with audiences".[130] Later that year, he produced, co-wrote and narrated The 11th Hour, a documentary on the state of the natural environment that won the Earthwatch Environmental Film Award in 2008.[131] DiCaprio's Appian Way produced Planet Green's Greensburg (2008–2010), which ran for three seasons. Set in Greensburg, Kansas, it is about rebuilding the town in a sustainable way after being hit by the May 2007 EF5 tornado.[132] Also in 2008, DiCaprio starred in Body of Lies, a spy film based on the novel of the same name. He played one of three agents battling a terrorist organization in the Middle East.[133] Considering the film to be a throwback to political features of the 1970s like The Parallax View (1974) and Three Days of the Condor (1975), DiCaprio dyed his hair brown and wore brown contacts for the role.[133] The film received mixed reviews from critics,[134] and grossed $118 million against a budget of $67.5 million.[135]

Later in 2008, DiCaprio collaborated with Kate Winslet for the drama Revolutionary Road, directed by her then-husband Sam Mendes. As both actors had been reluctant to make romantic films similar to Titanic, it was Winslet who suggested that they both work with her on a film adaptation of the 1961 eponymous novel by Richard Yates. She found that the script, by Justin Haythe, had little in common with the 1997 blockbuster.[136] Playing a couple in a failing marriage in the 1950s, DiCaprio and Winslet spent some time together in preparation, and DiCaprio felt claustrophobic on the small set they used.[78][137] He saw his character as "unheroic", "slightly cowardly" and someone "willing to be just a product of his environment".[138] Peter Travers liked DiCaprio's pairing with Winslet and his multi-layered portrayal of an overwhelmed character,[139] and Marshall Sella of GQ called it the "most mature and memorable performance of his lifetime".[137] DiCaprio earned his seventh Golden Globes nomination for the film.[140] Revolutionary Road grossed $75.9 million against its budget of $35 million.[141] He ended the 2000s by producing director Jaume Collet-Serra's psychological horror thriller film Orphan (2009), starring Vera Farmiga, Peter Sarsgaard and Isabelle Fuhrman. Although the film received mixed reviews, it was a commercial success.[142]
2010–2013: Films with high-profile directors

DiCaprio continued to collaborate with Scorsese in the 2010 psychological thriller film Shutter Island, based on the 2003 novel of the same name by Dennis Lehane. He played Edward "Teddy" Daniels, a U.S. Marshal investigating a psychiatric facility located on an island, who comes to question his own sanity. DiCaprio and Scorsese became interested in the project in 2007, and the former co-produced the film under Appian Way with Phoenix Pictures.[143] Because of the film's disturbing scenes, DiCaprio had nightmares of mass murder during production and considered relaxing with his friends a form of therapy.[144] The film was released to mixed reviews;[145] Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian praised Scorsese's direction and the acting but criticized its twist ending.[146] Peter Travers called it DiCaprio's "most haunting and emotionally complex performance yet", and particularly liked his cave scene with co-star Patricia Clarkson.[147] The film was a commercial success, grossing $294 million worldwide against a budget of $80 million.[148]
A photograph of seven people on stage; except for Leonardo DiCario on the right, they are all clapping cheerfully.
DiCaprio (first from the right) with the cast of Inception at the film's premiere in 2010

DiCaprio's second role in 2010 was in Christopher Nolan's critically acclaimed ensemble science-fiction film Inception.[149] Inspired by the experience of lucid dreaming and dream incubation,[150] the film features Dom Cobb (DiCaprio), an "extractor" who enters the dreams of others to obtain information that is otherwise inaccessible. Cobb is promised a chance to regain his old life in exchange for planting an idea in a corporate target's mind.[151] DiCaprio was fascinated with the idea of a "dream-heist" and the potential for his character to manipulate his dreamworld and impact his real life.[152] Made on a budget of $160 million, the film grossed $836 million worldwide to become DiCaprio's second highest-grossing film.[101][153] To star in this film, DiCaprio agreed to a pay cut from his $20 million fee and opted for a share in first-dollar gross points, which entitled him to a percentage of the cinema ticket sales. The risk proved fruitful, as DiCaprio earned $50 million from the film, becoming his highest payday yet.[154]

DiCaprio starred as J. Edgar Hoover in Clint Eastwood's J. Edgar (2011). A biopic about Hoover, the film focuses on his career as an FBI director, including an examination of his private life as an alleged closeted homosexual.[155] Critics felt that the film lacked coherence overall but commended DiCaprio's performance.[156][157] Roger Ebert praised DiCaprio's ability to bring depth and nuance to the character, suggesting that his performance conveyed aspects of Hoover's personality that were possibly even unknown to the man himself.[158] Also in 2011, he produced Catherine Hardwicke's romantic horror film Red Riding Hood. Though it was named one of the ten worst films of 2011 by Time magazine,[159] it had moderate box-office returns.[160] Also that year, DiCaprio's Appian Way produced George Clooney's political drama The Ides of March, an adaptation of Beau Willimon's 2008 play Farragut North.[161]

In 2012, DiCaprio starred as plantation owner Calvin Candie in Quentin Tarantino's Spaghetti Western, Django Unchained. After reading the script, DiCaprio felt uncomfortable with the extent of racism portrayed in the film, but his co-stars and Tarantino convinced him not to sugarcoat it.[162] While filming, DiCaprio accidentally cut his hand on glass, but continued filming, and Tarantino elected to use the take in the final product.[163] The film received critical acclaim;[164] a writer for Wired magazine commended him for playing a villainous role and found his performance "blood-chilling".[165] The film earned DiCaprio a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.[166] Django Unchained grossed $425 million worldwide on a production budget of $100 million.[167]

In January 2013, DiCaprio said he would take a long break from acting to "fly around the world doing good for the environment".[168] That year, he had four releases as an actor and a producer. His first was in the role of millionaire Jay Gatsby in Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby, an adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel of the same name, co-starring Carey Mulligan and Tobey Maguire.[169] The film received mixed reviews from critics, but DiCaprio's performance was praised and earned him the AACTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role.[170][171] Critic Rafer Guzman of Newsday wrote that DiCaprio was not only "tough [...] but also vulnerable, touching, funny, a faker, a human. It's a tremendous, hard-won performance."[172] Matt Zoller Seitz of Roger Ebert's website described his performance as "the movie's greatest and simplest special effect", and "iconic—maybe his career best".[173] The film grossed $353 million worldwide, more than three times its budget.[174] Three films were produced by DiCaprio under Appian Way in 2013—the ensemble crime thriller Runner Runner, which The Guardian's Xan Brooks described as "a lazy, trashy film that barely goes through the motions";[175] the commercially failed thriller Out of the Furnace; and the black comedy-drama The Wolf of Wall Street.[176][177]

DiCaprio reunited with Scorsese for the fifth time in The Wolf of the Wall Street, a film based on the life of stockbroker Jordan Belfort (played by DiCaprio), who was arrested in the late 1990s for securities fraud and money laundering.[178][179] DiCaprio wanted to play Belfort ever since he had read his autobiography and won a bidding war with Warner Bros. against Brad Pitt and Paramount Pictures for the rights to Belfort's memoir in 2007.[180][181] He was fond of Belfort's honest and unapologetic portrayal of his actual experiences in the book, and was inspired by the financial crisis of 2007–2008 to make the film.[109] The Wolf of Wall Street received positive reviews for Scorsese's and DiCaprio's work together.[182] The Hollywood Reporter's Todd McCarthy lauded DiCaprio for fully realizing his character's potential with a carefree performance.[183] Jonathan Romney of Film Comment wrote that DiCaprio displays a great deal of comedic talent, excelling in "rubber-limbed slapstick" humor.[184] The film earned him the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy and nominations for a BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, as well as Academy Awards for Best Actor and Best Picture.[185][186]
2014–present: Environmental documentaries and awards success

DiCaprio was an executive producer on Virunga, a 2014 British documentary film about four people fighting to protect the world's last mountain gorillas from war and poaching.[187] The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in April 2014,[188] and DiCaprio was nominated for the 2015 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special.[189] Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret was another documentary film that year for which he was an executive producer—he took part in the new cut released exclusively on Netflix that September.[190] It explores the impact of animal agriculture on the environment.[191]
A photograph of Leonardo DiCaprio looking to his right
DiCaprio at the French premiere of The Revenant in 2016

In 2015, DiCaprio produced and played fur trapper Hugh Glass in Alejandro G. Iñárritu's survival drama The Revenant. DiCaprio found his role in the film difficult; he had to eat a raw slab of bison's liver and sleep in animal carcasses.[192][193] He also learned to shoot a musket, build a fire, speak two Native American languages (Pawnee and Arikara) and apply ancient healing techniques.[192] Built on a budget of $135 million, the film earned $533 million worldwide.[194] The film received positive reviews with particular praise for DiCaprio's acting.[195] Mark Kermode of The Guardian wrote that DiCaprio shone with a performance that prioritizes physicality over speech,[196] and Nick De Semlyen of Empire noted that he uplifted the film.[197] The film earned him numerous awards, including an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, a Screen Actors Guild Award and a Critic's Choice Award for Best Actor.[198][199][200] For the next three years, DiCaprio narrated documentaries and served as a producer for films. In 2016, he was an executive producer for The Ivory Game and Catching the Sun;[177] he also produced, hosted and narrated the documentary Before the Flood about climate change.[201] He produced the crime drama Live by Night (2016), which received unenthusiastic reviews and failed to recoup its $65 million production budget.[177][202] His next production ventures were in 2018—the psychological horror Delirium and the commercially failed action–adventure Robin Hood.[203][204]

After producing and narrating the 2019 global warming documentary Ice on Fire,[205] DiCaprio returned to acting following a four-year break in Quentin Tarantino's comedy-drama Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, which traces the relationship between Rick Dalton (DiCaprio), an aging television actor and his stuntman, Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt).[206] To help the film's financing, DiCaprio and Pitt agreed to take a pay cut, and they each received $10 million.[207] DiCaprio liked working with Pitt, and Tarantino described the pair as the most exciting since Robert Redford and Paul Newman.[208][209] DiCaprio was fascinated with the film's homage to Hollywood and focus on the friendship between his and Pitt's characters. He drew from real-life experience of witnessing the struggles and rejections of his actor friends in the industry.[209] The film premiered at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival, where critics praised his and Pitt's performances.[210] A writer for Business Insider called it one of the best performances of DiCaprio's career,[211] and Ian Sandwell of Digital Spy particularly liked the duo's chemistry, believing their scenes together to be some of the film's strongest parts.[212] DiCaprio received nominations for an Oscar, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actor.[213] The film earned $374 million against a budget of $90 million.[214]

In 2020, DiCaprio served as an executive producer for The Right Stuff, a television series adaption of the 1973 namesake book. After being in development at National Geographic, it was released on Disney+.[215] That May, DiCaprio briefly featured in the finale of the miniseries The Last Dance.[216] In 2021, DiCaprio appeared in Adam McKay's satirical comedy Don't Look Up. He spent five months changing the film's script with McKay before agreeing to the part.[217] Starring alongside Jennifer Lawrence as two astronomers attempting to warn humanity about an extinction-level comet, DiCaprio saw this film as an analogy of the world's indifference to the climate crisis. As a frequent supporter of environmentalism, DiCaprio said he has often looked to star in and make films tackling issues related to it, something he found hard due to people's inability to listen. He praised McKay for envisioning a project on how humans would react to a serious issue from a political, social and scientific standpoint.[218] While reviews for the film were mixed, most critics praised DiCaprio's and Lawrence's performances;[219] journalists from Digital Spy and NDTV lauded their pairing.[220][221] DiCaprio earned nominations for a Golden Globe and a BAFTA Award for the film.[222][223] It broke the record for the most views (152 million hours) in a single week in Netflix history.[224]

DiCaprio next starred in Scorsese's crime drama Killers of the Flower Moon (2023) based on the book of the same name by David Grann,[225] for which he was paid $30 million.[226] Initially signed for the heroic part of FBI agent Thomas Bruce White Sr., DiCaprio insisted on playing the morally complex role of Ernest Burkhart, a nephew of murderer William King Hale, leading to extensive script rewrites.[227][228] Declaring it the best performance of DiCaprio's career, IndieWire's David Ehrlich wrote that "his nuanced and uncompromising turn as the cretinous Ernest Burkhart mines new wonders from the actor's long-standing lack of vanity".[229]
Reception and acting style

Early in his career, DiCaprio gained a reputation for his reckless behavior and intense partying with a group of male celebrities dubbed "the Pussy Posse" in the 1990s.[37][230] In an infamous article published by New York Magazine in 1998, journalist Nancy Jo Sales criticized the group as men whose pursuit was to "chase girls, pick fights and not tip the waitress".[231] During an unknown activity, DiCaprio got himself and friend Justin Herwick almost killed when his parachute failed to open, after which his instructor released an emergency core. In response, DiCaprio said he is fond of doing things that scare him. John McCain, who was a United States Senator for Arizona, called him "an androgynous wimp".[230] DiCaprio found people's perception of him exaggerated, adding, "They want you miserable, just like them. They don't want heroes; what they want is to see you fall."[10] Steven Spielberg, who directed him in Catch Me If You Can, defended DiCaprio's reputation as a "party boy", believing it is a common behavior for young people and describing him as a family-oriented person during the film's production.[232] Considering DiCaprio to be conscious of his public reputation, The New York Times' Caryn James credited him as one of the few actors to use his stardom to further social causes.[50] Carole Cadwalladr of The Guardian said DiCaprio is "polite, charming, makes jokes, engages eye contact. And manages [...] to give almost no hint whatsoever of his actual personality."[233]

    "Life can get pretty monotonous. Acting is like living multiple lives. When you make a movie, you go off to different places, live different cultures, investigate somebody else's reality, and you try to manifest that to the best of your ability. It is incredibly eye-opening. That's why I love acting. There's nothing as transformative as what a film, a documentary, can do to get people to care about something else besides their own lives."

—DiCaprio on his love of acting[20]

DiCaprio is regarded as one of the finest actors of his generation.[b] In a 2022 readers' poll by Empire, he was voted one of the 50 greatest actors of all time. The magazine praised his willingness to "go to the ends of the earth (often literally) to get under his characters' skin".[238] Colin Covert of The Seattle Times similarly believed DiCaprio "redefines film stardom" through his willingness to take on challenging roles that few of his contemporaries are capable of performing.[239]

Since his international stardom with Titanic (1997), he has admitted feeling nervous about starring in big-budget studio films because of their hype and marketing campaigns. As an actor, he views film as a "relevant art form, like a painting or sculpture. A hundred years from now, people will still be watching that movie."[2] He often plays roles based on real-life people and stories told in specific periods.[20][240] According to Caryn James, DiCaprio is unafraid of working with established directors on unconventional projects; taking such risks has led him to star in failed films like The Beach (2000),[50] but also his successful collaborations with Martin Scorsese.[241][242] DiCaprio has described his relationship with Scorsese as dreamlike and admires his knowledge of film, crediting the director with having taught him its history and importance.[233] Scorsese has commented on DiCaprio's ability to repeatedly demonstrate emotion on screen.[243] Jesse Hassenger of The A.V. Club considers the duo's collaborations—which earned them the 2013 National Board of Review (Spotlight Award)[244]—to be career-defining moments for both of them and as vital as Scorsese's acclaimed collaborations with Robert De Niro.[245]

Author Michael K. Hammond wrote that DiCaprio built his star reputation by demonstrating his acting ability, and praised him for "revealing a character while concealing the actor" and "disappearing into [his] roles".[246] According to Agnieszka Holland, who directed DiCaprio in Total Eclipse (1995), DiCaprio is "one of the most mature actors" she has worked with and is "courageous" in his choice of roles.[247] Holland remarked that he does not rely on method acting but rather on a trick that allows him to truly "become the character".[247] Meryl Streep, who co-starred with DiCaprio in Marvin's Room, said he possesses the kind of unpredictability that makes his career difficult to classify, his life precarious and his work thrilling.[60] Writing for The Observer, film critic Philip French has asserted that many characters portrayed by DiCaprio are in the process of becoming men. He wrote that DiCaprio's inclination toward films about dysfunctional families and characters seeking father figures may allude to his own troubled childhood.[233] DiCaprio often plays characters who themselves are playing roles, which Caryn James says looks simple on screen but requires sophisticated acting.[50] He tends to play antiheroes and characters who lose their mental stability as the narrative progresses.[248][249] Derek Thompson of The Atlantic argued that DiCaprio gives his best performances when playing "frauds and cheats and double-crossing liars and mercenaries".[248]

Several media publications, such as People,[250] Empire[251] and Harper's Bazaar,[252] have included DiCaprio in their listings of the most attractive actors. In 1998, he sued Playgirl magazine over plans to publish a fully nude picture of him.[253] He has said he does not believe in focusing on appearance—as this is only temporary and can negatively affect one's profession in the industry—and looks for career longevity instead.[254] In 2005, DiCaprio was made a commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture for his contributions to the arts.[255] In 2016, he was named one of the 100 most influential people in the world by Time magazine.[256] He was included on Forbes' annual list of the world's highest-paid actors in 2008 and from 2010 to 2016 with respective earnings of $45 million, $28 million, $77 million, $37 million, $39 million, $39 million, $29 million and $27 million, topping the list in 2011. The magazine has commended DiCaprio's ability to star in risky, R-rated films that become box office successes.[257] The Hollywood Reporter listed him as one of the 100 most powerful people in entertainment from 2016 to 2019.[258] A writer for the same magazine credits DiCaprio as the rare actor to have a successful career "without ever having made a comic book movie, family film or pre-branded franchise. Leo is the franchise."[259] Stacey Wilson Hunt, analyzing his career in New York Magazine in 2016, opined DiCaprio, unlike most of his contemporaries, had not starred in a bad film in the previous ten years.[247] Of his success, DiCaprio says, "My attitude is the same as when I started. I feel very connected to that fifteen-year-old kid who got his first movie."[209]

DiCaprio has named Robert De Niro and James Dean as two of his favorite and most influential actors, stating "There were a lot of great actors I really fell in love with, but if I were to pick two, from different generations, it would be De Niro and James Dean".[206] When asked about a performance that stayed with him the most, DiCaprio responded, "I remember being incredibly moved by Jimmy Dean, in East of Eden. There was something so raw and powerful about that performance. His vulnerability [...] his confusion about his entire history, his identity, his desperation to be loved. That performance just broke my heart."[260]
Other ventures
Activism

    "Climate change is real, it is happening right now. It is the most urgent threat facing our entire species, and we need to work collectively together and stop procrastinating. We need to support leaders around the world who do not speak for the big polluters, but who speak for all of humanity, for the indigenous people of the world, for the billions and billions of underprivileged people out there who would be most affected by this. For our children's children, and for those people out there whose voices have been drowned out by the politics of greed."

—DiCaprio during his acceptance speech at the 88th Academy Awards, 2016[261]

An active celebrity in the climate change movement,[262] DiCaprio believes global warming is the world's "number-one environmental challenge".[263] Eager to learn about ecology from an early age, he would watch documentaries on rainforest depletion and the loss of species and habitats.[264] In 1998, he established the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, a non-profit organization devoted to promoting environmental awareness.[265] It supports organizations and campaigns committed to ensuring a viable future for planet Earth, and produced the short web documentaries Water Planet and Global Warning.[266] The foundation has also funded debt-for-nature swaps.[267] By 2018, the foundation had funded more than 200 projects, providing $100 million in support.[268] He has been an active supporter of numerous environmental organizations and sat on the board of the World Wildlife Fund and International Fund for Animal Welfare.[266][269]

DiCaprio has owned environment-friendly electric-hybrid vehicles.[270] His use of private jets and large yachts have been criticized as hypocritical due to their large carbon footprints.[271][272] DiCaprio chaired the national Earth Day celebration in 2000 where he interviewed Bill Clinton and they discussed plans to deal with global warming and the environment.[273] He presented at the 2007 American leg of Live Earth.[274] DiCaprio donated $1 million to the Wildlife Conservation Society at Russia's Tiger Summit. DiCaprio's persistence in reaching the event after encountering two plane delays caused then Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to describe him as a "muzhik" or "real man".[275][276] In 2013, he organized a benefit fine art auction, "11th Hour", which raised nearly $38.8 million for his foundation.[277] In September 2014, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon designated DiCaprio as a United Nations Messenger of Peace with a focus on climate change.[278][279] Later that month, he made an opening statement to members of the UN Climate Summit; his speech reached an estimated one billion people worldwide.[280][281] In 2015, he announced his intention to divest from fossil fuels.[282] He again spoke at the UN in April 2016 prior to the signing of the Paris Climate Change Agreement.[283]
A photograph of John Kerry (left) and Leonardo DiCaprio both dressed in suits and looking away from the camera
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and DiCaprio at the Our Ocean Conference in 2016

At a 2016 meeting with Pope Francis, DiCaprio donated to charity and discussed environmental issues with him. A few days later, possibly influenced by this meeting, the Pope said he would act in a charity film.[c] DiCaprio traveled to Indonesia in early 2016 where he criticized the government's palm oil industry's slash-and-burn forest clearing methods.[285] In July 2016, his foundation donated $15.6 million to help protect wildlife and the rights of Native Americans, along with mitigating climate change.[286] That October, DiCaprio joined Mark Ruffalo in support of the Standing Rock tribe's opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline.[287]

In April 2017, DiCaprio protested against President Donald Trump's inaction on climate change by attending the People's Climate March.[288] In July, a charity auction and celebrity concert arranged by DiCaprio's foundation had raised over $30 million in one night.[289] The DiCaprio foundation donated $100 million in December 2018 to fight climate change.[290] In May 2021, DiCaprio pledged $43 million to enact conservation operations across the Galápagos Islands.[291]
Political views

DiCaprio endorsed Hillary Clinton for the 2016 presidential election.[292] In March 2020, DiCaprio attended a fundraiser for Joe Biden at the home of Paramount Pictures executive Sherry Lansing.[293] Prior to the 2020 election, DiCaprio narrated a Netflix documentary series about voting rights, stating, "All of us may have been created equal. But we'll never actually be equal until we all vote. So don't wait."[294] On social media, DiCaprio urged voters to make a plan to cast their ballots[295] and to draw attention to voter suppression[296] and restrictive voter ID laws, citing VoteRiders as a source of information and assistance.[297]

In 2023, DiCaprio testified during the trial against Prakazrel Michel, who is being accused of participating in a foreign influence campaign that was aimed at the Obama and Trump administrations.[298]
Philanthropy

In 1998, DiCaprio and his mother donated $35,000 for a "Leonardo DiCaprio Computer Center" at a library in Los Feliz.[299] In May 2009, DiCaprio joined Kate Winslet, director James Cameron and Canadian singer Celine Dion, in a campaign to raise money to financially support the fees of the nursing home where Millvina Dean, a survivor of the RMS Titanic, was residing. DiCaprio and Winslet donated $20,000 to support Dean.[300] In 2010, he donated $1 million to relief efforts in Haiti after the earthquake.[301] In 2011, DiCaprio joined the Animal Legal Defense Fund's campaign to release Tony, a tiger that had spent the last decade at a truck stop in Grosse Tête, Louisiana.[302] DiCaprio donated $61,000 to the gay rights group GLAAD in 2013.[303]

In 2016, DiCaprio donated $65,000 to the annual fundraising gala for the Children of Armenia Fund, where he was a special guest of his friend and honorary chair, Tony Shafrazi.[304] Supporting Hurricane Harvey (2017) relief efforts, DiCaprio provided $1 million through his foundation.[305] In 2020, DiCaprio's foundation donated $3 million to Australia bushfire relief efforts.[306] Amidst the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the media announced DiCaprio donated $10 million to support Ukraine,[d][308] although the news agency Associated Press suggested this amount was inaccurate.[307]
Personal life
A picture of Leonardo DiCaprio in a suit while he is looking to his left.
DiCaprio in 2008

DiCaprio is agnostic but does not identify as an atheist.[309] His personal life is the subject of widespread media attention.[310] He rarely grants interviews and is reluctant to discuss his private life.[247][311] DiCaprio has been the focus of various reports detailing his involvement with women aged 25 or younger, and has faced criticism for those relationships.[e][f][318] In 1999, DiCaprio met Brazilian model Gisele Bündchen, whom he dated until 2005.[319] He was romantically involved with Israeli model Bar Refaeli from 2005 to 2011. He later dated German fashion model Toni Garrn from 2013 to 2014 and later in 2017.[320] DiCaprio was in a relationship with American model and actress Camila Morrone from c. 2017 until 2022.[321][322]

DiCaprio owns houses in Los Angeles and apartments in New York City.[323] In 2009, he bought an island, Blackadore Caye, off mainland Belize—on which he is set to open an environment-friendly resort[324][325]—and in 2014, he purchased the original Dinah Shore residence designed by architect Donald Wexler in Palm Springs, California.[326]

In 2005, DiCaprio's face was severely injured when model Aretha Wilson hit him over the head with a broken bottle at a Hollywood party. As a result, he required seventeen stitches to his face and neck.[327] Wilson pleaded guilty to the assault and was sentenced in 2010 to two years in prison.[328]

In 2017, when The Wolf of Wall Street producer Red Granite Pictures was involved in the 1Malaysia Development Berhad scandal, DiCaprio turned over the gifts he received from business associates at the production company, including from fugitive businessman Jho Low, to the US government.[329][330] These included a Best Actor Oscar trophy won by Marlon Brando, a $3.2 million Pablo Picasso painting and a $9 million Jean-Michel Basquiat collage.[331]
Filmography and accolades
Main articles: Leonardo DiCaprio filmography and List of awards and nominations received by Leonardo DiCaprio

According to the online portal Box Office Mojo and the review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes, DiCaprio's most critically and commercially successful films include What's Eating Gilbert Grape (1993), Romeo + Juliet (1996), Titanic (1997), Catch Me If You Can (2002), Gangs of New York (2002), The Aviator (2004), The Departed (2006), Blood Diamond (2006), Shutter Island (2010), Inception (2010), Django Unchained (2012), The Great Gatsby (2013), The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), The Revenant (2015) and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019). His films have grossed $7.2 billion worldwide.[101][332]

DiCaprio has been recognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the following performances:[333][198][213]

    66th Academy Awards (1994): Best Supporting Actor, nomination, for What's Eating Gilbert Grape
    77th Academy Awards (2005): Best Actor, nomination, for The Aviator
    79th Academy Awards (2007): Best Actor, nomination, for Blood Diamond
    86th Academy Awards (2014): Best Picture and Best Actor, nominations, for The Wolf of Wall Street
    88th Academy Awards (2016): Best Actor, win, for The Revenant
    92nd Academy Awards (2020): Best Actor, nomination, for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

DiCaprio has won three Golden Globe Awards: Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama for The Aviator and The Revenant and Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for The Wolf of Wall Street,[334] as well as a BAFTA Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actor for The Revenant.[335][199]
See also

    List of oldest and youngest Academy Award winners and nominees – Youngest nominees for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
    List of actors with Academy Award nominations
    List of actors with two or more Academy Awards nominations in acting categories
    List of Golden Globe winners
    Grouvellinus leonardodicaprioi, a beetle named after DiCaprio
    Spintharus leonardodicaprioi, a spider named after DiCaprio

Notes

Titanic grossed $1.84 billion at the time of its release. After a re-release in 3D in 2012, it earned an additional $343.6 million worldwide, totaling up to $2.18 billion.[70][71]
Attributed to multiple references[211][234][235][236][237]
The Pope appeared in the faith-based charity film Beyond the Sun, whose profits were donated to charities in Argentina.[284]
DiCaprio donated to humanitarian groups, including CARE, International Rescue Committee, the United Nation's High Commissioner for Refugees and Save the Children.[307]
These criticisms include a reference in Taylor Swift's song "The Man",[312] as well as jokes made by hosts of the Golden Globe Awards in 2014,[313] and in 2020[314][315] and at the 94th Academy Awards.[316]

    In 2019, Camila Morrone addressed the criticism as follows: "There's so many relationships in Hollywood – and in the history of the world – where people have large age gaps [...] I just think anyone should be able to date who they want to date".[317]

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    Erdős, László (2019). "Greening Hollywood – the Activism of Leonardo DiCaprio". Green Heroes. Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 217–221. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-31806-2_43. ISBN 978-3-030-31805-5. S2CID 213723782.
    Hammond, Michael K. (2012). "Leonardo DiCaprio and Sean Penn: Acting Authentic". In Pomerance, Murray (ed.). Shining in Shadows: Movie Stars of the 2000s. Rutgers University Press. pp. 166–181. ISBN 978-0-81355-216-3.
    Mooney, William H. (2021). "Citizen Kane (1941) and Baz Luhrmann's the Great Gatsby (2013)". Adaptation and the New Art Film. Palgrave Studies in Adaptation and Visual Culture. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 237–268. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-62934-2_9. ISBN 978-3-030-62933-5. S2CID 238014709.
    Muir, John Kenneth (2004). The Unseen Force: The Films of Sam Raimi. Applause: Theatre & Cinema Books. ISBN 978-1-55783-607-6.
    Müller, Jürgen (2001). Movies of the 90s. Taschen. ISBN 978-3-8228-5878-3.
    Nash, Melanie; Lahti, Marti (1999). "The Paradoxes of Girls' Fandom". In Sandler, Kevin S.; Studlar, Gaylyn (eds.). Titanic: Anatomy of a Blockbuster. Rutgers University Press. pp. 64–88. ISBN 978-0-8135-2669-0.
    Neibaur, James L. (2016). The Essential Jack Nicholson. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-6989-7.
    Ochoa, George (2011). Deformed and Destructive Beings: The Purpose of Horror Films. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-8654-0.
    Pomerance, Murray (2012). "Leonardo DiCaprio: King of the 'World'". In Everett, Anna (ed.). Pretty People: Movie Stars of the 1990s. Rutgers University Press. pp. 103–122. doi:10.36019/9780813553252-007. ISBN 9780813553252. S2CID 225038492.
    Romney, Jonathan (2014). "The Man Who Sold the World". Film Comment. 50 (1): 22–27. JSTOR 43459881.
    Schwartz, David; Ryan, Steve; Wostbrock, Fred (1999). The Encyclopedia of TV Game Shows, 3rd Edition. Checkmark Books. ISBN 978-0-8160-3847-3.
    Todd, Erica (2014). Passionate Love and Popular Cinema. Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1057/9781137295385. ISBN 978-1-349-45183-8.
    Wight, Douglas (2012). Leonardo DiCaprio – The Biography. John Blake Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78219-859-8.

External links
Leonardo DiCaprio
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Leonardo DiCaprio

    Filmography Accolades

Producer
Screenwriter

    The 11th Hour (2007) Greensburg (2008)

    Gardener of Eden (2007) Orphan (2009) Red Riding Hood (2011) Runner Runner (2013) Out of the Furnace (2013) The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) Before the Flood (2016) Live by Night (2016) Delirium (2018) Robin Hood (2018) Ice on Fire (2019) Richard Jewell (2019)

Related
Appian Way Productions George DiCaprio (father) Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio Grouvellinus leonardodicaprioi Spintharus leonardodicaprioi
Category
Awards for Leonardo DiCaprio

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Academy Award for Best Actor
1928–1950

    Emil Jannings (1928) Warner Baxter (1929) George Arliss (1930) Lionel Barrymore (1931) Fredric March / Wallace Beery (1932) Charles Laughton (1933) Clark Gable (1934) Victor McLaglen (1935) Paul Muni (1936) Spencer Tracy (1937) Spencer Tracy (1938) Robert Donat (1939) James Stewart (1940) Gary Cooper (1941) James Cagney (1942) Paul Lukas (1943) Bing Crosby (1944) Ray Milland (1945) Fredric March (1946) Ronald Colman (1947) Laurence Olivier (1948) Broderick Crawford (1949) José Ferrer (1950)

1951–1975

    Humphrey Bogart (1951) Gary Cooper (1952) William Holden (1953) Marlon Brando (1954) Ernest Borgnine (1955) Yul Brynner (1956) Alec Guinness (1957) David Niven (1958) Charlton Heston (1959) Burt Lancaster (1960) Maximilian Schell (1961) Gregory Peck (1962) Sidney Poitier (1963) Rex Harrison (1964) Lee Marvin (1965) Paul Scofield (1966) Rod Steiger (1967) Cliff Robertson (1968) John Wayne (1969) George C. Scott1 (1970) Gene Hackman (1971) Marlon Brando1 (1972) Jack Lemmon (1973) Art Carney (1974) Jack Nicholson (1975)

1976–2000

    Peter Finch (1976) Richard Dreyfuss (1977) Jon Voight (1978) Dustin Hoffman (1979) Robert De Niro (1980) Henry Fonda (1981) Ben Kingsley (1982) Robert Duvall (1983) F. Murray Abraham (1984) William Hurt (1985) Paul Newman (1986) Michael Douglas (1987) Dustin Hoffman (1988) Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) Jeremy Irons (1990) Anthony Hopkins (1991) Al Pacino (1992) Tom Hanks (1993) Tom Hanks (1994) Nicolas Cage (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Jack Nicholson (1997) Roberto Benigni (1998) Kevin Spacey (1999) Russell Crowe (2000)

2001–present

    Denzel Washington (2001) Adrien Brody (2002) Sean Penn (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Sean Penn (2008) Jeff Bridges (2009) Colin Firth (2010) Jean Dujardin (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Matthew McConaughey (2013) Eddie Redmayne (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Rami Malek (2018) Joaquin Phoenix (2019) Anthony Hopkins (2020) Will Smith (2021) Brendan Fraser (2022)

1 refused award that year

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AACTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1972–2000

    Bruce Spence (1972) Robert McDarra (1973) Jack Thompson (1974) Martin Vaughan (1975) Simon Burke and Nick Tate (1976) John Meillon (1977) Bill Hunter (1978) Mel Gibson (1979) Jack Thompson (1980) Mel Gibson (1981) Ray Barrett (1982) Norman Kaye (1983) John Hargreaves (1984) Chris Haywood (1985) Colin Friels (1986) Leo McKern (1987) John Waters (1988) Sam Neill (1989) Max von Sydow (1990) Hugo Weaving (1991) Russell Crowe (1992) Harvey Keitel (1993) Nicholas Hope (1994) John Lynch (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Richard Roxburgh (1997) Hugo Weaving (1998) Russell Dykstra (1999) Eric Bana (2000)

2001–present

    Anthony LaPaglia (2001) David Gulpilil (2002) David Wenham (2003) Sam Worthington (2004) Hugo Weaving (2005) Shane Jacobson (2006) Eric Bana (2007) William McInnes (2008) Anthony LaPaglia (2009) Ben Mendelsohn (2010) Daniel Henshall (2011) Chris O'Dowd (2012) Leonardo DiCaprio (2013) David Gulpilil (2014) Michael Caton (2015) Andrew Garfield (2016) Sunny Pawar (2017) Hamilton Morris (2018) Damon Herriman (2019) Toby Wallace (2020) Caleb Landry Jones (2021) Austin Butler (2022)

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AACTA International Award for Best Actor

    Jean Dujardin (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Chiwetel Ejiofor (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Rami Malek (2018) Adam Driver (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Benedict Cumberbatch (2021) Austin Butler (2022)

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BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1952–1967
British

    Ralph Richardson (1952) John Gielgud (1953) Kenneth More (1954) Laurence Olivier (1955) Peter Finch (1956) Alec Guinness (1957) Trevor Howard (1958) Peter Sellers (1959) Peter Finch (1960) Peter Finch (1961) Peter O'Toole (1962) Dirk Bogarde (1963) Richard Attenborough (1964) Dirk Bogarde (1965) Richard Burton (1966) Paul Scofield (1967)

Foreign

    Marlon Brando (1952) Marlon Brando (1953) Marlon Brando (1954) Ernest Borgnine (1955) François Périer (1956) Henry Fonda (1957) Sidney Poitier (1958) Jack Lemmon (1959) Jack Lemmon (1960) Paul Newman (1961) Burt Lancaster (1962) Marcello Mastroianni (1963) Marcello Mastroianni (1964) Lee Marvin (1965) Rod Steiger (1966) Rod Steiger (1967)

1968–present

    Spencer Tracy (1968) Dustin Hoffman (1969) Robert Redford (1970) Peter Finch (1971) Gene Hackman (1972) Walter Matthau (1973) Jack Nicholson (1974) Al Pacino (1975) Jack Nicholson (1976) Peter Finch (1977) Richard Dreyfuss (1978) Jack Lemmon (1979) John Hurt (1980) Burt Lancaster (1981) Ben Kingsley (1982) Michael Caine / Dustin Hoffman (1983) Haing S. Ngor (1984) William Hurt (1985) Bob Hoskins (1986) Sean Connery (1987) John Cleese (1988) Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) Philippe Noiret (1990) Anthony Hopkins (1991) Robert Downey Jr. (1992) Anthony Hopkins (1993) Hugh Grant (1994) Nigel Hawthorne (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Robert Carlyle (1997) Roberto Benigni (1998) Kevin Spacey (1999) Jamie Bell (2000) Russell Crowe (2001) Daniel Day-Lewis (2002) Bill Murray (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Mickey Rourke (2008) Colin Firth (2009) Colin Firth (2010) Jean Dujardin (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Chiwetel Ejiofor (2013) Eddie Redmayne (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Rami Malek (2018) Joaquin Phoenix (2019) Anthony Hopkins (2020) Will Smith (2021) Austin Butler (2022)

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Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actor
1980–2000

    Robert De Niro (1980) Burt Lancaster (1981) Dustin Hoffman (1982) Eric Roberts (1983) Haing S. Ngor (1984) Jack Nicholson (1985) Bob Hoskins (1986) Albert Brooks (1987) Daniel Day-Lewis (1988) Daniel Day-Lewis (1989) Jeremy Irons (1990) Nick Nolte (1991) Denzel Washington (1992) Daniel Day-Lewis (1993) Albert Finney (1994) Nicolas Cage (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Al Pacino (1997) Brendan Gleeson (1998) Jim Carrey (1999) Colin Farrell (2000)

2001–present

    Brian Cox / Denzel Washington (2001) Adrien Brody (2002) Bill Murray (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Frank Langella (2007) Sean Penn / Mickey Rourke (2008) Jeremy Renner (2009) Jesse Eisenberg (2010) Brad Pitt (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Chiwetel Ejiofor (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Paul Dano / Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Daniel Kaluuya (2017) John C. Reilly (2018) Adam Sandler (2019) Anthony Hopkins (2020) Hidetoshi Nishijima (2021) Colin Farrell (2022)

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Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor

    Jeremy Irons (1988) Tom Cruise (1989) Jeremy Irons (1990) Anthony Hopkins (1991) Denzel Washington (1992) Liam Neeson (1993) Tom Hanks (1994) Nicolas Cage (1995) Billy Bob Thornton (1996) Robert Duvall (1997) Ian McKellen (1998) Russell Crowe (1999) Tom Hanks (2000) Gene Hackman (2001) Daniel Day-Lewis (2002) Bill Murray (2003) Paul Giamatti (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Mickey Rourke (2008) Jeremy Renner (2009) Colin Firth (2010) Michael Shannon (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Chiwetel Ejiofor (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Timothée Chalamet (2017) Ethan Hawke (2018) Adam Driver (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Benedict Cumberbatch (2021) Colin Farrell (2022)

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Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actor

    Kevin Bacon (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Jack Nicholson (1997) Ian McKellen (1998) Russell Crowe (1999) Russell Crowe (2000) Russell Crowe (2001) Daniel Day-Lewis / Jack Nicholson (2002) Sean Penn (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Sean Penn (2008) Jeff Bridges (2009) Colin Firth (2010) George Clooney (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Matthew McConaughey (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Christian Bale (2018) Joaquin Phoenix (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Will Smith (2021) Brendan Fraser (2022)

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Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actor in a Comedy

    Bradley Cooper (2012) Leonardo DiCaprio (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Christian Bale (2015) Ryan Reynolds (2016) James Franco (2017) Christian Bale (2018)

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Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor

    Jeremy Irons (1990) Anthony Hopkins (1991) Denzel Washington (1992) Anthony Hopkins (1993) Tom Hanks (1994) Nicolas Cage (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Peter Fonda (1997) Jim Carrey (1998) Kevin Spacey (1999) Russell Crowe (2000) Russell Crowe (2001) Jack Nicholson (2002) Sean Penn (2003) Paul Giamatti (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Sean Penn (2008) George Clooney (2009) James Franco (2010) George Clooney (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Matthew McConaughey (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Christian Bale (2018) Adam Driver (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Benedict Cumberbatch (2021) Colin Farrell (2022)

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Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama
1943–1975

    Paul Lukas (1943) Alexander Knox (1944) Ray Milland (1945) Gregory Peck (1946) Ronald Colman (1947) Laurence Olivier (1948) Broderick Crawford (1949) José Ferrer (1950) Fredric March (1951) Gary Cooper (1952) Spencer Tracy (1953) Marlon Brando (1954) Ernest Borgnine (1955) Kirk Douglas (1956) Alec Guinness (1957) David Niven (1958) Anthony Franciosa (1959) Burt Lancaster (1960) Maximilian Schell (1961) Gregory Peck (1962) Sidney Poitier (1963) Peter O'Toole (1964) Omar Sharif (1965) Paul Scofield (1966) Rod Steiger (1967) Peter O'Toole (1968) John Wayne (1969) George C. Scott (1970) Gene Hackman (1971) Marlon Brando (1972) Al Pacino (1973) Jack Nicholson (1974) Jack Nicholson (1975)

1976–2000

    Peter Finch (1976) Richard Burton (1977) Jon Voight (1978) Dustin Hoffman (1979) Robert De Niro (1980) Henry Fonda (1981) Ben Kingsley (1982) Robert Duvall / Tom Courtenay (1983) F. Murray Abraham (1984) Jon Voight (1985) Bob Hoskins (1986) Michael Douglas (1987) Dustin Hoffman (1988) Tom Cruise (1989) Jeremy Irons (1990) Nick Nolte (1991) Al Pacino (1992) Tom Hanks (1993) Tom Hanks (1994) Nicolas Cage (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Peter Fonda (1997) Jim Carrey (1998) Denzel Washington (1999) Tom Hanks (2000)

2001–present

    Russell Crowe (2001) Jack Nicholson (2002) Sean Penn (2003) Leonardo DiCaprio (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Mickey Rourke (2008) Jeff Bridges (2009) Colin Firth (2010) George Clooney (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Matthew McConaughey (2013) Eddie Redmayne (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Rami Malek (2018) Joaquin Phoenix (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Will Smith (2021) Austin Butler (2022)

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Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy
1950–1976

    Fred Astaire (1949) Danny Kaye (1951) Donald O'Connor (1952) David Niven (1953) James Mason (1954) Tom Ewell (1955) Mario Moreno (1956) Frank Sinatra (1957) Danny Kaye (1958) Jack Lemmon (1959) Jack Lemmon (1960) Glenn Ford (1961) Marcello Mastroianni (1962) Alberto Sordi (1963) Rex Harrison (1964) Lee Marvin (1965) Alan Arkin (1966) Richard Harris (1967) Ron Moody (1968) Peter O'Toole (1969) Albert Finney (1970) Chaim Topol (1971) Jack Lemmon (1972) George Segal (1973) Art Carney (1974) George Burns / Walter Matthau (1975)

1976–2000

    Kris Kristofferson (1976) Richard Dreyfuss (1977) Warren Beatty (1978) Peter Sellers (1979) Ray Sharkey (1980) Dudley Moore (1981) Dustin Hoffman (1982) Michael Caine (1983) Dudley Moore (1984) Jack Nicholson (1985) Paul Hogan (1986) Robin Williams (1987) Tom Hanks (1988) Morgan Freeman (1989) Gérard Depardieu (1990) Robin Williams (1991) Tim Robbins (1992) Robin Williams (1993) Hugh Grant (1994) John Travolta (1995) Tom Cruise (1996) Jack Nicholson (1997) Michael Caine (1998) Jim Carrey (1999) George Clooney (2000)

2001–present

    Gene Hackman (2001) Richard Gere (2002) Bill Murray (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Joaquin Phoenix (2005) Sacha Baron Cohen (2006) Johnny Depp (2007) Colin Farrell (2008) Robert Downey Jr. (2009) Paul Giamatti (2010) Jean Dujardin (2011) Hugh Jackman (2012) Leonardo DiCaprio (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Matt Damon (2015) Ryan Gosling (2016) James Franco (2017) Christian Bale (2018) Taron Egerton (2019) Sacha Baron Cohen (2020) Andrew Garfield (2021) Colin Farrell (2022)

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Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Screen Combo
1990s

    Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt – Interview with the Vampire / Sylvester Stallone and Sharon Stone – The Specialist (1994) Any combination of two people (or two body parts) – Showgirls (1995) Demi Moore and Burt Reynolds – Striptease (1996) Dennis Rodman and Jean-Claude Van Damme – Double Team (1997) Leonardo DiCaprio and Leonardo DiCaprio (as twins) – The Man in the Iron Mask (1998) Kevin Kline and Will Smith – Wild Wild West (1999)

2000s

    John Travolta and anyone sharing the screen with him – Battlefield Earth (2000) Tom Green and any animal he abuses – Freddy Got Fingered (2001) Adriano Giannini and Madonna – Swept Away (2002) Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez – Gigli (2003) George W. Bush and either Condoleezza Rice or his pet goat – Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004) Will Ferrell and Nicole Kidman – Bewitched (2005) Shawn Wayans and either Kerry Washington or Marlon Wayans – Little Man (2006) Lindsay Lohan and Lindsay Lohan (as twins) – I Know Who Killed Me (2007) Paris Hilton and either Christine Lakin or Joel David Moore – The Hottie and the Nottie (2008) Sandra Bullock and Bradley Cooper – All About Steve (2009)

2010s

    The entire cast of Sex and the City 2 (2010) Adam Sandler and either Katie Holmes, Al Pacino or Adam Sandler – Jack and Jill / The entire cast of Jack and Jill (2011) Mackenzie Foy and Taylor Lautner – The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 / The entire cast of The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 (2012) Jaden Smith and Will Smith on planet nepotism – After Earth (2013) Kirk Cameron and his ego – Saving Christmas (2014) Jamie Dornan and Dakota Johnson – Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) Ben Affleck and Henry Cavill – Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) Any two obnoxious Emojis – The Emoji Movie (2017) Donald Trump and "His Self Perpetuating Pettiness" – Death of a Nation and Fahrenheit 11/9 (2018) Any two half-feline/half-human hairballs – Cats (2019)

2020s

    Rudy Giuliani and his pants zipper – Borat Subsequent Moviefilm (2020) LeBron James and any Warner cartoon character (or Time-Warner product) he dribbles on – Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021) Tom Hanks and his latex-laden face (and ludicrous accent) – Elvis (2022)

Between 2010–2012, the category also included Worst Screen Ensemble.

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MTV Movie & TV Award for Best Performance in a Movie
Best Male Performance
(1992–2005, 2008–2016)

    Arnold Schwarzenegger (1992) Denzel Washington (1993) Tom Hanks (1994) Brad Pitt (1995) Jim Carrey (1996) Tom Cruise (1997) Leonardo DiCaprio (1998) Jim Carrey (1999) Keanu Reeves (2000) Tom Cruise (2001) Will Smith (2002) Eminem (2003) Johnny Depp (2004) Leonardo DiCaprio (2005) Will Smith (2008) Zac Efron (2009) Robert Pattinson (2010) Robert Pattinson (2011) Josh Hutcherson (2012) Bradley Cooper (2013) Josh Hutcherson (2014) Bradley Cooper (2015) Leonardo DiCaprio (2016)

Best Female Performance
(1992–2005, 2008–2016)

    Linda Hamilton (1992) Sharon Stone (1993) Janet Jackson (1994) Sandra Bullock (1995) Alicia Silverstone (1996) Claire Danes (1997) Neve Campbell (1998) Cameron Diaz (1999) Sarah Michelle Gellar (2000) Julia Roberts (2001) Nicole Kidman (2002) Kirsten Dunst (2003) Uma Thurman (2004) Lindsay Lohan (2005) Elliot Page (2008) Kristen Stewart (2009) Kristen Stewart (2010) Kristen Stewart (2011) Jennifer Lawrence (2012) Jennifer Lawrence (2013) Jennifer Lawrence (2014) Shailene Woodley (2015) Charlize Theron (2016)

Best Performance
(2006–2007, 2017–present)

    Jake Gyllenhaal (2006) Johnny Depp (2007) Emma Watson (2017) Chadwick Boseman (2018) Lady Gaga (2019) No Award (2020) Chadwick Boseman (2021) Tom Holland (2022) Tom Cruise (2023)

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MTV Movie Award for Best Gut-Wrenching Performance

    Amy Poehler (2009)† Ken Jeong (2010)† Justin Bieber (2011)‡ Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne, Melissa McCarthy, Wendi McLendon-Covey & Ellie Kemper (2012) Jamie Foxx & Samuel L. Jackson (2013) Leonardo DiCaprio (2014) Seth Rogen & Rose Byrne (2015)

† The award was initially named Best WTF Moment; ‡ The award was re-named Best Jaw-Dropping Moment

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National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor
1954–1975

    John Williams (1954) Charles Bickford (1955) Richard Basehart (1956) Sessue Hayakawa (1957) Albert Salmi (1958) Hugh Griffith (1959) George Peppard (1960) Jackie Gleason (1961) Burgess Meredith (1962) Melvyn Douglas (1963) Martin Balsam (1964) Harry Andrews (1965) Robert Shaw (1966) Paul Ford (1967) Leo McKern (1968) Philippe Noiret (1969) Frank Langella (1970) Ben Johnson (1971) Joel Grey / Al Pacino (1972) John Houseman (1973) Holger Löwenadler (1974) Charles Durning (1975)

1976–2000

    Jason Robards (1976) Tom Skerritt (1977) Richard Farnsworth (1978) Paul Dooley (1979) Joe Pesci (1980) Jack Nicholson (1981) Robert Preston (1982) Jack Nicholson (1983) John Malkovich (1984) Klaus Maria Brandauer (1985) Daniel Day-Lewis (1986) Sean Connery (1987) River Phoenix (1988) Alan Alda (1989) Joe Pesci (1990) Anthony Hopkins (1991) Jack Nicholson (1992) Leonardo DiCaprio (1993) Gary Sinise (1994) Kevin Spacey (1995) Edward Norton (1996) Greg Kinnear (1997) Ed Harris (1998) Philip Seymour Hoffman (1999) Joaquin Phoenix (2000)

2001–present

    Jim Broadbent (2001) Chris Cooper (2002) Alec Baldwin (2003) Thomas Haden Church (2004) Jake Gyllenhaal (2005) Djimon Hounsou (2006) Casey Affleck (2007) Josh Brolin (2008) Woody Harrelson (2009) Christian Bale (2010) Christopher Plummer (2011) Leonardo DiCaprio (2012) Will Forte (2013) Edward Norton (2014) Sylvester Stallone (2015) Jeff Bridges (2016) Willem Dafoe (2017) Sam Elliott (2018) Brad Pitt (2019) Paul Raci (2020) Ciarán Hinds (2021) Brendan Gleeson (2022)

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San Diego Film Critics Society Award for Best Actor

    Kenneth Branagh (1996) Jack Nicholson (1997) Ian McKellen (1998) Kevin Spacey (1999) Russell Crowe (2000) Guy Pearce (2001) Daniel Day-Lewis (2002) Chiwetel Ejiofor (2003) Jim Carrey (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Ken Takakura (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Mickey Rourke (2008) Colin Firth (2009) Colin Farrell (2010) Michael Shannon (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Oscar Isaac (2013) Jake Gyllenhaal (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) James McAvoy (2017) Ethan Hawke (2018) Adam Driver / Joaquin Phoenix (2019) Riz Ahmed (2020) Nicolas Cage (2021) Colin Farrell (2022)

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Satellite Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture
Drama
(1996–2010, 2018–present)

    Geoffrey Rush (1996) Robert Duvall (1997) Edward Norton (1998) Terence Stamp (1999) Geoffrey Rush (2000) Brian Cox (2001) Michael Caine / Daniel Day-Lewis (2002) Sean Penn (2003) Don Cheadle (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Viggo Mortensen (2007) Richard Jenkins (2008) Jeremy Renner (2009) Colin Firth (2010) Willem Dafoe (2018) Christian Bale (2019) Riz Ahmed (2020) Benedict Cumberbatch (2021) Brendan Fraser (2022)

Musical or Comedy
(1996–2010, 2018–present)

    Tom Cruise (1996) Jack Nicholson (1997) Ian Bannen / David Kelly (1998) Philip Seymour Hoffman (1999) Michael Douglas (2000) Ewan McGregor (2001) Kieran Culkin (2002) Bill Murray (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Terrence Howard (2005) Joseph Cross (2006) Ryan Gosling (2007) Ricky Gervais (2008) Michael Stuhlbarg (2009) Michael Cera (2010) Rami Malek (2018) Taron Egerton (2019) Sacha Baron Cohen (2020) Andrew Garfield (2021) Austin Butler (2022)

Motion Picture
(2011–2017)

    Ryan Gosling (2011) Bradley Cooper (2012) Matthew McConaughey (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Andrew Garfield / Viggo Mortensen (2016) Gary Oldman / Harry Dean Stanton (2017)

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Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Drama
(1996–2005)

    Armin Mueller-Stahl (1996) Burt Reynolds (1997) Donald Sutherland (1998) Harry Lennix (1999) Bruce Greenwood (2000) Ben Kingsley (2001) Dennis Haysbert (2002) Djimon Hounsou (2003) Christopher Walken (2004) Danny Huston (2005)

Musical or Comedy
(1996–2005)

    Cuba Gooding Jr. (1996) Rupert Everett (1997) Bill Murray (1998) William H. Macy (1999) Willem Dafoe (2000) Jim Broadbent (2001) Michael Constantine (2002) Eugene Levy (2003) Thomas Haden Church (2004) Val Kilmer (2005)

Motion Picture
(2006–present)

    Leonardo DiCaprio (2006) Casey Affleck / Tom Wilkinson (2007) Michael Shannon (2008) Christoph Waltz (2009) Christian Bale (2010) Albert Brooks (2011) Javier Bardem (2012) Jared Leto (2013) J. K. Simmons (2014) Christian Bale (2015) Jeff Bridges (2016) Sam Rockwell (2017) Richard E. Grant (2018) Willem Dafoe (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Kodi Smit-McPhee (2021) Ke Huy Quan (2022)

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Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role

    Tom Hanks (1994) Nicolas Cage (1995) Geoffrey Rush (1996) Jack Nicholson (1997) Roberto Benigni (1998) Kevin Spacey (1999) Benicio del Toro (2000) Russell Crowe (2001) Daniel Day-Lewis (2002) Johnny Depp (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Sean Penn (2008) Jeff Bridges (2009) Colin Firth (2010) Jean Dujardin (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Matthew McConaughey (2013) Eddie Redmayne (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Denzel Washington (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Rami Malek (2018) Joaquin Phoenix (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Will Smith (2021) Brendan Fraser (2022)

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Silver Bear for Best Actor
1956–1975

    Burt Lancaster (1956) Pedro Infante (1957) Sidney Poitier (1958) Jean Gabin (1959) Fredric March (1960) Peter Finch (1961) James Stewart (1962) Sidney Poitier (1963) Rod Steiger (1964) Lee Marvin (1965) Jean-Pierre Léaud (1966) Michel Simon (1967) Jean-Louis Trintignant (1968) Jean Gabin (1971) Alberto Sordi (1972) Vlastimil Brodský (1975)

1976–2000

    Gerhard Olschewski (1976) Fernando Fernán Gómez (1977) Craig Russell (1978) Michele Placido (1979) Andrzej Seweryn (1980) Jack Lemmon / Anatoly Solonitsyn (1981) Michel Piccoli / Stellan Skarsgård (1982) Bruce Dern (1983) Albert Finney (1984) Fernando Fernán Gómez (1985) Tuncel Kurtiz (1986) Gian Maria Volonté (1987) Manfred Möck / Jörg Pose (1988) Gene Hackman (1989) Iain Glen (1990) Maynard Eziashi (1991) Armin Mueller-Stahl (1992) Denzel Washington (1993) Tom Hanks (1994) Paul Newman (1995) Sean Penn (1996) Leonardo DiCaprio (1997) Samuel L. Jackson (1998) Michael Gwisdek (1999) Denzel Washington (2000)

2001–2020

    Benicio del Toro (2001) Jacques Gamblin (2002) Sam Rockwell (2003) Daniel Hendler (2004) Lou Taylor Pucci (2005) Moritz Bleibtreu (2006) Julio Chávez (2007) Reza Naji (2008) Sotigui Kouyaté (2009) Grigoriy Dobrygin / Sergei Puskepalis (2010) Shahab Hosseini / Babak Karimi / Payman Maadi / Ali-Asghar Shahbazi (2011) Mikkel Følsgaard (2012) Nazif Mujić (2013) Liao Fan (2014) Tom Courtenay (2015) Majd Mastoura (2016) Georg Friedrich (2017) Anthony Bajon (2018) Wang Jingchun (2019) Elio Germano (2020)

    vte

St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor

    Jamie Foxx (2004) Heath Ledger (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) Daniel Day-Lewis (2007) Sean Penn (2008) George Clooney (2009) Colin Firth (2010) George Clooney (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Chiwetel Ejiofor (2013) Jake Gyllenhaal (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Ethan Hawke (2018) Adam Sandler (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Nicolas Cage (2021) Brendan Fraser (2022)

    vte

Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Actor

    Jack Nicholson (2002) Bill Murray (2003) Jamie Foxx (2004) Philip Seymour Hoffman (2005) Forest Whitaker (2006) George Clooney (2007) Mickey Rourke (2008) George Clooney (2009) Colin Firth (2010) George Clooney (2011) Daniel Day-Lewis (2012) Chiwetel Ejiofor (2013) Michael Keaton (2014) Leonardo DiCaprio (2015) Casey Affleck (2016) Gary Oldman (2017) Bradley Cooper (2018) Adam Driver (2019) Chadwick Boseman (2020) Andrew Garfield (2021) Colin Farrell (2022)

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List of highest-paid film actors

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Salaries for the world's highest-paid film actors currently range from US$20–40 million, but an actor can earn substantially more by deferring all or part of their salary against a percentage of the film's gross, known within the industry as a "profit participation" deal.

Highest earnings for a single production
Since not all salaries are made public, this is a non-definitive list of actors who have received $30 million or more as compensation for their services in a single production. Occasionally an actor's fee may cover multiple films, and they are included on the list if the films were filmed as a back-to-back production, as was the case for Keanu Reeves and The Matrix sequels. The figures are given at their nominal value, since earnings from profit-based deals are accumulated over many years, making it unfeasible to adjust for inflation.

Highest-earning actors for a single production
Actor Film Year Salary Total income Ref
Arnold Schwarzenegger Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines 2003 $29,250,000 $30,000,000+ [nb 2][1]
Mel Gibson Lethal Weapon 4 1998 $30,000,000 $30,000,000 [1]
Brad Pitt Ocean's Eleven 2001 $10,000,000 $30,000,000 [1]
Leonardo DiCaprio Don't Look Up 2021 $30,000,000 $30,000,000 [19]
Leonardo DiCaprio Killers of the Flower Moon 2023 $30,000,000 $30,000,000 [24]
Jim Carrey Yes Man 2008 $35,000,000 [23]
Will Smith Emancipation 2021 $35,000,000 $35,000,000 [24]
Aamir Khan Dangal 2016 $39,000,000 [nb 1][21][22]
Robert Downey Jr. Captain America: Civil War 2016 $40,000,000 $40,000,000+ [6]
Leonardo DiCaprio Titanic 1997 $40,000,000 [1]
Tom Hanks Saving Private Ryan 1998 $40,000,000 [1]
Johnny Depp Alice in Wonderland 2010 $40,000,000 [11]
Robert Downey Jr. Avengers: Age of Ultron 2015 $40,000,000 [17]
Will Smith King Richard 2021 $40,000,000 $40,000,000 [18]
Denzel Washington The Little Things 2021 $40,000,000 [19]
Cameron Diaz Bad Teacher 2011 $42,000,000 [16]
Robert Downey Jr. The Avengers 2012 $50,000,000 [14]
Margot Robbie Barbie 2023 $12,500,000 $50,000,000 [15]
Jackie Chan Rush Hour 3 2007 $15,000,000 $53,700,000 [13]
Johnny Depp Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides 2011 $35,000,000 $55,000,000 [11][12]
Leonardo DiCaprio Inception 2010 $59,000,000 [11]
Jack Nicholson Batman 1989 $6,000,000 $60,000,000 [1][10]
Harrison Ford Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull 2008 $65,000,000 [9]
Sandra Bullock Gravity 2013 $20,000,000 $70,000,000+ [8]
Tom Hanks Forrest Gump 1994 $70,000,000 [1]
Tom Cruise Mission: Impossible 1996 $70,000,000 [1]
Robert Downey Jr. Avengers: Infinity War 2018 $75,000,000+ [5]
Robert Downey Jr. Iron Man 3 2013 $75,000,000 [6]
Robert Downey Jr. Avengers: Endgame 2019 $20,000,000 $75,000,000 [7]
Bruce Willis The Sixth Sense 1999 $14,000,000 $100,000,000 [1]
Tom Cruise Mission: Impossible 2 2000 $100,000,000 [1]
Tom Cruise War of the Worlds 2005 $100,000,000 [1]
Will Smith Men in Black 3 2012 $100,000,000 [2]
Tom Cruise Top Gun: Maverick 2022 $12,500,000 $100,000,000 [3][4]
Keanu Reeves The Matrix Reloaded
The Matrix Revolutions 2003 $30,000,000 $156,000,000 [1]
 ₹257 crore ($39.4 million at 2017 exchange rates).[20]
 Arnold Schwarzenegger received a $29,250,000 salary for Terminator 3 plus a 20% royalty on the worldwide box office gross over $380 million. The film ultimately had a global gross of $433 million.
Highest annual earnings

Sylvester Stallone was the highest-paid actor in 1987, 1988, 1990, and 1995.

Dwayne Johnson was the highest-paid actor in 2016, 2019, 2020, and 2021.

Julia Roberts was the highest-paid actress in 1998, 1999, and 2000.
Forbes publishes yearly lists of the highest-paid actors and actresses based on total earnings from 1 June the previous year to 1 June the current year.

Annual highest-paid actor and actress
Year Actor Earnings Actress Earnings Ref.
1987 Sylvester Stallone $74 million Jane Fonda $13 million [25]
1988 Sylvester Stallone $63 million [26]
1989 Eddie Murphy $60 million [27]
1990 Sylvester Stallone $63 million [28]
1991 Kevin Costner $59 million [29]
1992 Kevin Costner $71 million [30]
1993 Kevin Costner $48 million [31]
1994 Harrison Ford $44 million [32]
1995 Sylvester Stallone $58 million Roseanne Barr $32 million [33]
1996 Arnold Schwarzenegger $74 million Roseanne Barr $40 million [34]
1997 Tom Cruise $82 million Roseanne Barr $55 million [35]
1998 Harrison Ford $58 million Julia Roberts $28 million [36]
1999 Tom Hanks $71.5 million Julia Roberts $50 million [37]
2000 Bruce Willis $70 million Julia Roberts $18.9 million [38]
2002 Adam Sandler $47 million Cameron Diaz $40 million [39]
2003 Will Smith $60 million Jennifer Aniston $35 million [40]
2004 Jim Carrey $66 million Cameron Diaz $32 million [41]
2005 Will Ferrell $40 million Drew Barrymore $22 million [42]
2006 Tom Cruise $67 million Jodie Foster $27 million [43]
2007 Johnny Depp $92 million Nicole Kidman $28 million [44]
2008 Johnny Depp $72 million Cameron Diaz $50 million [45]
2009 Harrison Ford $65 million Angelina Jolie $27 million [46][47]
2010 Johnny Depp $75 million Sandra Bullock $56 million [48][49]
2011 Leonardo DiCaprio $77 million Angelina Jolie $30 million [50][51]
2012 Tom Cruise $75 million Kristen Stewart $34.5 million [52][53]
2013 Robert Downey Jr. $75 million Angelina Jolie $33 million [54][55]
2014 Robert Downey Jr. $75 million Sandra Bullock $51 million [56][57]
2015 Robert Downey Jr. $80 million Jennifer Lawrence $52 million [58][59]
2016 Dwayne Johnson $64.5 million Jennifer Lawrence $46 million [60]
2017 Mark Wahlberg $68 million Emma Stone $26 million [61]
2018 George Clooney $239 million[nb 1] Scarlett Johansson $40.5 million [62][63]
2019 Dwayne Johnson $89.4 million Scarlett Johansson $56 million [64][65]
2020 Dwayne Johnson $87.5 million Sofía Vergara $43 million [66][67]
2021 Dwayne Johnson $270 million Reese Witherspoon $115 million [68]
2022 Brad Pitt $100 million [69]
 George Clooney's 2018 earnings are mainly from the June 2017 sale of Casamigos tequila.
See also
List of highest-grossing actors
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