According to the study,
When host Jimmy Fallon told Jackson that Hill is first on the list, The Banker star replied: “That's some bulls***.” Hill has used a total of 376 curse words in film history, followed by Leonardo DiCaprio who has cursed 361 times. Jackson came in third with 301 curses used throughout his career.
According to Fallon's source Jonah Hill tops the list, uttering 376 swears throughout his filmography. Leonardo DiCaprio picks up second place with 361. And Jackson takes the bronze with just 301 swears. Obviously, Jackson calls “bullsh*t” on this one.
1 'Swearnet: The Movie' (2014) – 935 f-words
It's all in the title, really. It shouldn't be too much of a surprise that a movie called Swearnet is extremely profane, but still, racking up almost 1000 f-words in one movie is something.
Martin Scorsese's latest big screen release The Wolf of Wall Street has set a new Guinness World Records record title for most swearing in one film. The same f-word expletive is used 506 times – an average of 2.81 times per minute.
Reserved only for impact in the PG-13 universe, R-rated films have a green light to use the F-word unregulated. You only get one, and you better make it count.
The 10 actors who have sworn most in cinema history:
Leonardo DiCaprio – 361. Samuel L Jackson – 301. Adam Sandler – 295.
Cursing countries which swear the most - and the least
The French have 7.59% - or seven in every 100 people - using curse words online per year. A close second was Poland, with 7.31%. Further down the rankings are Australia, New Zealand and Spain.
Joe Pesci, who is not from New England, but rather New Jersey, is by far the actor that has dropped the most f-bombs. He's so far ahead of everyone else, with 272 f-bombs in movies. But get this: 241 were in the film Casino alone.
The star recently discovered that Jonah Hill holds the record for most curse words said by an actor on film, and he was very surprised about it.
The study found those who came up with the most F, A and S words also produced the most swear words. That's a sign of intelligence “to the degree that language is correlated with intelligence,” said Jay, who authored the study. “People that are good at language are good at generating a swearing vocabulary.”
Tom Hanks May Not Swear Much In Movies, But He Sure Dropped An F-Bomb After Fans Knocked Into Rita Wilson. The nicest guy in Hollywood drops an f-bomb after an unfortunate run-in with fans. Tom Hanks has been considered one of the nicest guys in Hollywood.
Rated an 'R' in the US and a '15' in the UK, South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut (US 1999), included 399 swear words during its running time, which despite labeled as 'uncut,' ran between 75 - 82 minutes depending on which country it was released in.
'The Wolf of Wall Street' has 506 f-words. The Leonardo DiCaprio-starrer 'The Wolf of Wall Street' has 506 f-word expletives, according to the Guinness World Records. In total, the film has 687 expletives- an average of 3.81 swear words per minute.
In sixth place is Martin Scorsese's 1990 film, Casino, with 422 f-words. And while the documentary Swearnet: The Movie is technically first on the list with 935 instances of the word, Scorsese's The Wolf of Wall Street places first for scripted films with 569 f-bombs said in 180 minutes.
Do not use the f-word if you are not an adult. Although there's no hard-lines or consensus on a certain age, the general recommendation will be: Never use the f-word if you are under the age of 13. Strongly avoid using the word if you are under the age of 18.
PG-13 movies are allowed one F-bomb -- so what are the BEST uses of the lone F-bomb in PG-13 movies? We compiled the best of the best and put them here for you to enjoy. Here are 10 moments in PG-13 movies that use their one granted F-word to maximum effect.
Real Nigga Roll Call - Lil Jon ft.
Contains over 329 swear words, while Insane Clown Posse's "Fuck The World" contains 102 swear words, not 593, 102.