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poster of The Great Gatsby
Rating: 7.366/10 by 12211 users

The Great Gatsby (2013)

An adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's Long Island-set novel, where Midwesterner Nick Carraway is lured into the lavish world of his neighbor, Jay Gatsby. Soon enough, however, Carraway will see through the cracks of Gatsby's nouveau riche existence, where obsession, madness, and tragedy await.

Directing:
  • Baz Luhrmann
  • Deborah Antoniou
  • Jennifer Leacey
  • Emma Jamvold
  • Betty Fotofili
  • Samantha Smith McGrady
  • Scott Lovelock
  • Eddie Thorne
  • Christopher Turner
  • Greg Tynan
Writing:
  • Baz Luhrmann
  • Craig Pearce
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald
Stars:
Release Date: Thu, May 09, 2013

Rating: 7.366/10 by 12211 users

Alternative Title:
The Great Gatsby 3D - US
Gatsby Le Magnifique - FR
Velikij Getsbi - RU
El Gran Gatsby - ES
Great Gatsby, The (2013) - US
O Grande Gatsby 2013 - BR
위대한 개츠비 - KR
Der grosse Gatsby - DE
了不起的盖茨比 - CN
大亨小傳 - HK

Country:
United States of America
Australia
Language:
English
Runtime: 02 hour 23 minutes
Budget: $105,000,000
Revenue: $351,040,419

Plot Keyword: infidelity, based on novel or book, obsession, hope, long island, new york, 1920s, voiceover, tragic

Tobey Maguire
Nick Carraway
Carey Mulligan
Daisy Buchanan
Joel Edgerton
Tom Buchanan
Isla Fisher
Myrtle Wilson
Jason Clarke
George Wilson
Amitabh Bachchan
Meyer Wolfsheim
Callan McAuliffe
Teen Jay Gatsby
Jack Thompson
Dr. Walter Perkins
Mal Day
The Boss-Probity Trust
Brendan Maclean
Klipspringer
Kate Mulvany
Mrs. McKee
David Furlong
Walter Chase
Daniel Gill
Police Commissioner
Iota
Trimalchio the Orchestra Leader
Barry Otto
Benny McClenahan
John O'Connell
Newton Orchid
Ben McIvor
Clerk - Probity Trust
Hamish Michael
Clerk - Probity Trust
Brian Rooney
Clerk - Probity Trust
Gemma Ward
Languid Girl
Goran D. Kleut
Head Waiter - Speakeasy
Denning Isles
Clarinetist
Heather Mitchell
Daisy's Mother
Nick Tate
Taxi Driver
Lisa Adam
Weeping / Singing Woman
Frank Aldridge
Well Dressed Male Witness - Wilson's Garage
Price Johnson
Singer - Wilson's Garage
Bill Young
Policeman - Wilson's Garage
Nicholas Simpson
Second Policeman - Wilson's Garage
Eden Falk
Mr. McKee
Kim Knuckey
Senator Gulick
Barrie Laws
Party Guest
Mark Lemon
The Professor
Nick Meenahan
Train Conductor
Kasia Stelmach
Silent Film Star Marlene Moon
Olga Miller
Russian Silent Film Actress
Gus Murray
Teddy Barton
Corey Blake Owers
Louisville Officer
Tasman Palazzi
Young James Gatz
Brenton Prince
Guard at Gatsby's Gates
Milan Pulvermacher
Waiter - Hotel Sayre
Jake Ryan
Motorcycle Cop
John Sheerin
The Police Captain
Sylvana Vandertouw
European Woman
Matthew Whittet
Vladimir Tostoff
Nancy Denis
Foxy Baker / Speakeasy Dancer
Briden Starr
Party Dancer
Charles Bartley
Party Dancer
Kane Bonke
Party Dancer
Kirby Burgess
Party Dancer
Henry Byalikov
Party Dancer
Thomas Egan
Party Dancer
Danielle Evrat
Party Dancer
Ryan Gonzalez
Party Dancer
Michelle Hopper
Party Dancer
Lara Mulcahy
Party Dancer
Kaylie Yee
Party Dancer
James May
Party Dancer
Zac McAliece
Party Dancer
Alex Stewart
Party Dancer
Mikaela Smith
Party Dancer
Tiana Canterbury
Speakeasy Dancer
Morgan Choice
Speakeasy Dancer
Lisa Viola
Speakeasy Dancer
Eden Dessalegn
Speakeasy Dancer
Elenoa Rokobaro
Speakeasy Dancer
Effie Nkrumah
Dancing Couple
Thabang Baloyi
Dancing Couple
Donna Stevens
Trapeze Artist
Lil Tulloch
Trapeze Artist
Leah Wood
Gatsby's Mother (uncredited)
Kate Rutherford
Party Guest (uncredited)
Ryan Cooper
Extra (uncredited)

Andres Gomez

Baz Luhrmann repeats what he did with Rome + Juliet and creates a horrible moster full of FX and exaggeration. Still, the cast performs well.

anthonyryan1

An over the top portrayal of the classic novel, while at times excessive and tasteless, it truly hits home with the novels original critique on the excess of the time. The cast was **excellent**, the movie stayed true to the novel in all the most important ways. I personally feel the modern soundtrack wasn't appropriate in several cases, but a couple flawless executions.

GenerationofSwine

See I don't know how to review this because I came into it hating the novel, and it's 2022, it took me over a decade to finally say "fine I'll watch the movie." And unfortunately they didn't improve things. It's still, well, pretentious. It's still a story of someone that is living above his means, and living a very shallow life, that the audience is supposed to relate to enough to either like or dislike him... ... and I just never could. Holden Claufield was pretentious, but the magic of the Catcher in the Rye is that everyone could relate to him in some way, everyone could connect in some way, even if you ultimately didn't like him. Jay Gatsby, you can't really relate to him. The best description for him is a false prophet, at least the most apt description of him is a false prophet... and that isn't a relatable protagonist. That isn't the sort of character that most people can connect with. And it carried over into this film. It's hard to get into the novel when the protagonist is unrelatable, and just as hard to get into the film. But, at the same time, it's done beautifully and Leo did nail the part. In fact, all the acting was pretty great.

CinemaSerf

To be fair to Baz Luhrmann, this is actually quite a difficult story to adapt for the big screen. On the face of it, there are many contradictions right from the start (not least that our relatively normal narrator - trader "Nick" (Tobey Maguire) lives next door to the eponymous and enigmatic millionaire (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his Disney-esque castle). The story is told by way of a retrospective during which the now depressed "Nick" regales his psychiatrist with his tales of life in the fast lane that offered him the opportunity to mix with the rich and famous at the very end of the 1920s through his new neighbour. Simultaneously, he must cope with the unhappy marriage between his cousin "Daisy" (Carey Mulligan) and her selfish, womanising, husband - of old wealth - "Tom" (Joel Edgerton). The film starkly contrasts the wealth and profligacy of the "Gatsby" existence with those of the poverty stricken working class reeling, still, from the impact of the Great Depression. The film looks beautiful. The costumes and the dancing, the cars, the jewellery and the houses (fancy and less so) all add richness to the story and the performances - especially from DiCaprio, Edgerton and to a lesser extent Jason Clarke are really quite good. Maguire and Mulligan less so and I found that unlike in many other of his films, the use of a contemporaneous soundtrack whilst all are clad in the Upstate NY finery didn't work so well for me. The book is an interesting character study looking at just about everything from wealth and privilege to prostitution and mental illness - and for the most part this stays on track. Easily the best cinema adaptation of a flawed book - and well worth watching.


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