Movie |
Corruption | Iraq
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7.1/10
IMDbBest Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy | 2017 | Jonah
Best Comedy TV Spot | 2017
Location Professional of the Year Studio Feature Film | 2015 | Ken
Budget 50,000,000 USD
Box Office Collection 86,234,523 USD
The real David Packouz appears in the movie, singing "Don't Fear The Reaper" in the retirement home where Miles Teller tries to sell sheets.
The real Efraim Diveroli declined to meet with Jonah Hill. Hill said "I'm used to it. If a person is aggressively against me playing them, it's probably a good sign."
In this film, Efraim (Jonah Hill) becomes angry at an employee who criticizes the letters in the name AEY for not standing for anything. In real life, the initials do mean something. The company had at first been a shell company started by Efraim's father. The letters in the name are the initials of his children, Aaron, Avigail, Avrohom, Efraim, and Yeshaya.
The action that took place in Albania was filmed in Romania, even the language of the workers at the warehouse was Romanian.
Jonah Hill gained 44 pounds for the role.
"David Packouz: [From the beginning of the film, as Miles Teller's character, David Packaouz, narrates over visuals of soldiers in war and as price figures of what a soldier's gear costs are displayed] What do you know about war? They'll tell you it's about patriotism, democracy... or some shit about the other guy hating our freedom. But you wanna know what it's really about? What do you see? A kid from Arkansas doing his patriotic duty to defend his country? I see a helmet, fire-retardant gloves, body armor and an M16. I see $17, 500. That's what it costs to outfit one American soldier. Over two million soldiers fought in Iraq and Afghanistan. It cost the American taxpayer $4.5 billion each year just to pay the air conditioning bills for those wars. And that's what war is really about. War is an economy. Anybody who tells you otherwise is either in on it or stupid."
"Henry Girard: I'm not a bad man, but in certain situations, I have to ask myself: "What would a bad man do?""