Did Leonardo DiCaprio read The Great Gatsby?
The Titanic star had revealed in an interview with Good Morning America that he had considered turning down the role of Jay Gatsby. Leonardo said that he was reluctant to take the role. He had read it in junior high school and it made sense to him.
How many times does Leonardo DiCaprio say old sport in The Great Gatsby?
The phrase “old sport” is said 55 times during the movie; all but four of those times are delivered by Leonardo DiCaprio (including two instances repeated in flashbacks near the end of the film).
Why was Leonardo DiCaprio chosen?
Though he had to launch a global search for an actor to play Gatsby’s lost love Daisy, Luhrmann knew from the start that he wanted DiCaprio to play the title character, a role the director refers to as “the American Hamlet”. For that reason, the tale became less of a love story for DiCaprio.
What is Gatsby’s accent?
Lurhmann’s an Australian and Long Island is ever so slightly closer to New York than it is Britain’s fair capital. Well, there are a couple of connections: The character Gatsby affects an English accent in Fitzgerald’s book. That’s how cool us Brits were in 1922.
Why is it odd that Gatsby keeps calling Nick old sport?
Gatsby calls Nick an “old sport,” which implies that he wishes to follow a lifestyle of “old money,” and attain characteristics of a rich man. The repeated use of “old sport” throughout the story also describes Gatsby’s myopic and self-centered demeanor.
What does angry and half in love with her and tremendously sorry I turned away mean?
When Jordan tells Nick she is to marry someone else, he is moved: “Angry, and half in love, with her, and tremendously sorry, I turned away.” Half in love is not in love. He is the lover, and she the object of his love. In the end, he could be said to have given his life for Daisy. …
What do we learn about Nick when he reflects I was within and without simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life?
When Nick says “I was within and without, simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life” in The Great Gatsby, he means that the fashionable lifestyle of Tom, Myrtle, and their party guests is both alluring and repulsive to him.