SETTINGS & WORLDS
wealth and decadence
Films whose social world is constituted by inherited or accumulated wealth — manor houses, dynastic estates, financial elites, aristocratic rituals — where money and class function not merely as backdrop but as the primary structuring force of behavior, desire, and moral corruption, whether the film regards that world with fascination, satire, or elegiac mourning. The register encompasses both insider portraits (The Leopard, Phantom Thread, Howards End) and outsider-penetration narratives (Saltburn, Knives Out, Triangle of Sadness), united by the fact that the architecture, manners, and power of extreme wealth are what the film is fundamentally about. Distinct from urban-alienation (which centers the city as an anonymizing, isolating force experienced by ordinary or marginal people) by requiring wealth itself — its rituals, spaces, and corruptions — to be the social engine; distinct from bohemian-scene (which centers artistic or countercultural communities that may overlap with money but whose defining texture is creative milieu rather than class power).

The Leopard
1963

The Rules of the Game
1939

The Age of Innocence
1993

American Psycho
2000

Raise the Red Lantern
1991

The Great Gatsby
2013

Saltburn
2023

The Exterminating Angel
1962

The Great Beauty
2013

The Music Room
1958

Sunset Boulevard
1950

The Magnificent Ambersons
1942

Babylon
2022

The Great Gatsby
1974

Barry Lyndon
1975

The Philadelphia Story
1940

The Handmaiden
2016

Brideshead Revisited
2008

The Heiress
1949

Anna Karenina
2012

Match Point
2005

The Favourite
2018

Written on the Wind
1956

Dangerous Liaisons
1988

Gosford Park
2001