The Great Gatsby -2013- Direct

Luhrmann's Gatsby is an assault on the senses, and nowhere is this more evident than in its jaw-dropping production design and its controversial, genre-bending soundtrack. Working with his wife and longtime collaborator, Catherine Martin—an Oscar-winning production and costume designer—the director created a world that redefined the Jazz Age for the 21st century.

Upon its release, The Great Gatsby was a lightning rod for critics.

Despite the sniping, audiences turned up. Opening against little competition, Gatsby raked in $50.1 million in its domestic opening weekend. By the end of its theatrical run, it had earned nearly $145 million domestically and over $353 million globally, more than tripling its production budget. The Great Gatsby -2013-

The film was a massive triumph in visual design, earning Academy Awards for both Best Production Design and Best Costume Design (awarded to Catherine Martin).

The critical reception of The Great Gatsby was as divided as its soundtrack was debated. At its core, the film raised a fundamental question: Can a story about the emptiness of excess be told through the language of extreme excess? This paradox lies at the heart of the film's enduring legacy. Luhrmann's Gatsby is an assault on the senses,

The success of any Gatsby adaptation hinges entirely on its central enigmatic figure, and the 2013 film secured a powerhouse cast to bring the complex characters to life.

Overall Assessment Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby (2013) is less a literal translation than a flamboyant re-interpretation that foregrounds spectacle to probe enduring themes: the seduction of wealth, the instability of identity, and the impossibility of recapturing the past. It’s a film that will polarize viewers—rewarding those open to bold stylistic choices and provoking debate from purists who prefer subdued fidelity to Fitzgerald’s tone. Despite the sniping, audiences turned up

Directed by Baz Luhrmann, the 2013 adaptation of The Great Gatsby

You're referring to the 2013 film adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel "The Great Gatsby"!

In that moment, Luhrmann stops trying to reinvent Fitzgerald and simply serves him. It is a devastatingly quiet ending to a deafeningly loud movie.