Originally made as a silent film, The Wolf of Wall Street was completely re-filmed with sound,[2] becoming Bancroft's first talkie.[3]
Plot
A ruthless trader corners the market in copper and then sells short, making a fortune but ultimately ruining the finances of himself and his friends.[4][5][6]
Reception for the film was mixed. Life criticized the film for depending too much on its novelty value; the advertising ran "George Bancroft talks ... Baclanova sings", and Life noted "there is the good news that George Bancroft has a fine screen voice", but felt the film lacked substance in the plot.[7]Film Daily wrote that "George Bancroft as the roughneck engineering a pool in Wall Street to get the sucker is immense, as usual", but complained of a lack of action and weak story.[citation needed]
^Films in Review โ Volume 37 1986, p. 12; "THE WOLF OF WALL STREET. 1929. Paramount. Ben Schulberg, producer. With George Bancroft, Paul Lukas, Olga Baclanova, Hector Chacon, and Nancy Carroll. Originally made as a silent, The Wolf of Wall Street was completely re-filmed as a talking ..."
^Roy Liebman. From silents to sound: a biographical encyclopedia 1998, p. 16; '"Sound: George Bancroft retained his star status through his first few talkies, his sound debut coming in The Wolf of Wall Street (1929)"'.
^Kenneth White Munden. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures (1997); Cast: George Bancroft (The Wolf), Baclanova (Olga, his wife), Paul Lukas (David Tyler), Nancy Carroll (Gert, the maid), ... "The Wolf of Wall Street corners the market in copper and then sells short, making a fortune ... To revenge himself, The Wolf deliberately ruins himself and Tyler in the market and then walks out on his wife."
^Paul L. Nemcek. The films of Nancy Carroll (1969), p. 75; "With George Bancroft What the critics said about THE WOLF OF WALL STREET Film Daily: George Bancroft as the roughneck engineering a pool in Wall Street to get the sucker is immense, as usual, but the lack of action and weak story cramp.."
^Life, Volume 93, page xix (1929); "... George Bancroft talks ... Baclanova sings ... so the public flocks in to satisfy its curiosity. Thank Heaven the sound of the human voice will soon cease to be a novelty on the screen, and producers may then find it necessary to provide."