Los Angeles: A federal judge says actor
Leonardo DiCaprio can be questioned for litigation stemming from The Wolf of Wall Street.
The
lawsuit was brought by lawyer and investment banker Andrew Greene against
Paramount Pictures Corp and others in 2014.
Greene is
claiming more than $50m, saying that the portrayal of Nicky “Rugrat” Koskof
defames him, portraying him as “a criminal and drug user with misogynistic
tendencies”.
In the
2013 film, Koskof engaged in illegal and unethical acts, also using cocaine,
sexually engaging with a prostitute and shaving a woman’s head.
Kosof was close friends with DiCaprio’s character
Jordan Belfort, a stock broker who cost investors tens of millions of dollars
during the 1990s.
Paramount says the character of Koskof is
fictional and based on a number of people. Their lawyers wrote in court
documents: “No reasonable fact finder could claim that ‘Nicky’ was a
recognisable likeness of Andrew Greene.” DiCaprio’s lawyers, who had opposed
the request to make him testify, said he had not written or directed the film.
They added that Greene’s lawsuit did not accuse DiCaprio of providing the
defamatory content or deciding to include it. Greene’s lawyers have not
sought to depose actor PJ Byrne, who played Koskof.
Martin Scorsese, who won an Academy Award for
directing the film, has already been deposed.
The 2013
film was nominated for five Academy Awards, four BAFTAS, two Golden Globes,
among other and won one Golden Globe for ‘Best Performance By An Actor In A
Motion Picture- Musical Or Comedy.’ Made on a budget of $155 million, it earned
$392 million in the box-office.
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