Wolves of Wall Street | |
Director: | David DeCoteau |
Producer: | Sylvia Hess (producer) Roberta Friedman Jeffrey Schenck (co-producers) Eddy Collyns (line producer) Paul Colichman Andreas Hess Stephen P. Jarchow (executive producers) |
Starring: | Jeff Branson Louise Lasser William Gregory Lee Angela Pietropinto John Michaelson Mary Elaine Monti Eric Roberts |
Music: | Harry Manfredini |
Distributor: | DEJ Productions Regent Worldwide Sales LLC (worldwide) |
Runtime: | 85 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Wolves of Wall Street is a 2002 American horror film directed by David DeCoteau.
On the advice of a bartender familiar with the Wall Street crowd, Jeff Allen (William Gregory Lee) applies to the Wolfe Brothers brokerage firm in New York City for his dream job as a stock broker. What he does not know is that the brokers are werewolves, and he is bitten, thus he "joins the pack". He is forced to abandon his love and values for cunning and instinct during which time he cheats on his girlfriend, Annabella, and brutally kills and eats various humans. After a change of heart, he finds that leaving the brotherhood is harder than joining.
Jeff goes to Annabella's friend's birthday party, and a drunk tries hitting on Annabella. Jeff rips a piece out of the neck of the drunk and then chases his girlfriend back to her apartment and bites her, transforming her into a werewolf too. Annabella had given him a silver pen when he first started as an intern at the Wolfe Brothers firm, and he goes back to the headquarters and he tries to quit, but his mentor, Dyson Keller, refuses to let him go. Jeff leaves anyway, but the werewolves led by Vince, go to Annabelle's apartment and seize her. They force him to return to headquarters, and he stabs the person he thought was the alpha but he was wrong, and a fight ensues during which he and his girlfriend kill all of the werewolves, and then they start walking away. The alpha who they thought they had killed, opens his eyes a split second before the end of the film, showing that they were not successful.
https://www.cinema-crazed.com/blog/2005/10/22/wolves-of-wall-street-2002/https://web.archive.org/web/20071205085807/http://oldschoolreviews.com/rev_2000/wolves_wallstreet.htm
The film was a selection in the William Shatner DVD Club, a mail order club for independent sci-fi and horror films that operated for just under a year.[1]