Boiler Room Knows What You Did

2000 American flick

Banality Room
Boiler room ver3.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Ben Younger
Written past Ben Younger
Produced past Jennifer Todd
Suzanne Todd
Starring
  • Giovanni Ribisi
  • Vin Diesel fuel
  • Nia Long
  • Nicky Katt
  • Scott Caan
  • Ben Affleck
Cinematography Enrique Chediak
Edited by Chris Peppe
Music by The Angel

Production
company

Team Todd

Distributed by New Line Cinema

Release appointment

  • February 18, 2000 (2000-02-18)

Running fourth dimension

120 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $7 one thousand thousand[2]
Box office $28 one thousand thousand[2]

Boiler Room is a 2000 American crime drama film written and directed by Ben Younger and starring Giovanni Ribisi, Vin Diesel fuel, Nia Long, Ben Affleck, Nicky Katt, Scott Caan, Tom Everett Scott, Ron Rifkin, and Jamie Kennedy. The film was conceived when screenwriter Ben Younger interviewed for a job at brokerage firm Sterling Foster. Younger said, "I walked in and immediately realized, 'This is my movie.' I mean, you see these kids and know something is going on."[iii]

The film was nominated for several awards including the Black Reel Awards 2001, British Contained Film Awards 2000, Deauville Film Festival 2000. Winner. Jury Special Prize, Motion-picture show Contained Spirit Awards 2000.

Plot [edit]

In 1999, Seth Davis (Ribisi), a 19-year-sometime Queens College dropout, runs an unlicensed casino in his home well-nigh the campus, catering to college students. Although he earns a successful living, he is a disappointment to his father, Marty (Rifkin), a New York City federal judge. One nighttime, his cousin Adam (Kennedy) stops by the casino to play blackjack, bringing a rich acquaintance named Greg Weinstein (Katt) along with him. Greg recruits Seth to join J.T. Marlin, a brokerage firm based somewhere off the Long Island Expressway, promising him that he has the opportunity to go rich.

Arriving at J.T. Marlin, Seth attends a grouping interview and learns from Jim Young (Affleck), one of the co-founders of the house, what is expected of his piece of work and also how he can become a millionaire, which he assures to the applicants will happen within iii years of the first day of employment at J.T. Marlin. The firm's techniques of selling are through cold calling investors to sell stock, and Seth joins as a stockbroker trainee, having to shut 40 accounts and pass a Series seven Exam to begin working independently. The brokers honey to quote insider trader Gordon Gekko from Wall Street, seeing him as a role model. He is soon making a expert living, as well as winning his father'due south approval and embarking on a romance with Abbie Halpert (Long), a secretary and Greg's ex-girlfriend.

Gradually, he learns that J.T. Marlin is a chop shop brokerage firm that runs a "pump and dump", using its brokers to create artificial demand in the stock of expired or fake companies, and speculative penny stocks. When the house is done pumping the stock, the firm founders sell and trade for legitimate stocks for tape profits. However, the investors then have no 1 to sell their shares to in the market when the price of the stock plummets, causing them to lose their investment. The FBI agents investigating the house decide to pursue Seth, hoping to make him their informant.

Seth passes his Series 7 Exam and becomes a broker. He and then contacts Harry Reynard (Taylor Nichols), the purchasing manager of a gourmet foods company. Although Harry is reluctant, he gives in after Seth lies that the stock is guaranteed to go up in value; Seth sells him 100 shares at $8 each. When the stock's value drops, Harry calls dorsum to ask why the stock has done then poorly, only to have Seth persuade him to buy more than worthless shares. The stock eventually tanks, costing Harry his savings and his family unit.

Feeling guilty for scamming Harry, Seth resolves to shut the business firm down. Marty and so disowns him, accusing him of destroying peoples' lives. Seth investigates further, discovering that the firm's founders are already preparing to carelessness J.T. Marlin, destroy the records, and cut ties with their employees to re-make and kickoff their scheme under a new proper name, leaving their victims to face a lengthy legal boxing without much hope of recovering their money. Seth shows up at his father's function and tearfully explains that he shut down his casino and went along with a highly criminal line of work that he thought was legal to gain his family'south approving. He then requests that his father help him on an IPO scheme to rob the business firm of their money and bring them down, hoping that his deportment, while illegal, volition recover plenty money to assist J.T. Marlin's victims. Although Marty initially refuses due to the risk of losing his judgeship, he calls Seth the side by side day, reconciling with him and offering to help with the scheme.

Seth is eventually arrested past the FBI for the violation of 26 SEC and NASD regulations, and is brought into their custody along with his begetter, as the bureau had discovered their IPO scheme from a tape-recorded phone chat. The FBI offer him federal immunity if he agrees to testify against J.T. Marlin in one case all the suspects are brought into courtroom, and threaten to involve Marty in order to assure Seth's cooperation. Seth asserts that he will evidence confronting the business firm and provide strong evidence of their illegal practices only if his father is released. He and the agents come to an agreement on this, with Seth beingness kept overnight. After that, it is implied that he will be free to become as the FBI will go along to raid the edifice and prosecute everybody else.

Seth returns to work the adjacent twenty-four hour period and goes along with the FBI's instructions to make copies of investment files onto a floppy deejay to use as evidence. Before leaving, Seth attempts to get Harry'southward money dorsum. He lies to Michael Brantley (Scott), the company's founder, by explaining that the business firm can lose a lot of coin by refusing to go on to do business with Harry Reynard, who Seth makes out to be an important prospect at a make-or-break point. Brantley agrees to go on, offering him shares of the next IPO, with a caveat that he cannot sell the shares until the firm has sold off theirs. In order to sell the shares backside Michael's back, Seth needs a sell ticket signed by a senior broker, something that his direct supervisor, Greg, has explicitly said that he would never do. He seeks a signing from Chris Varick (Diesel), explaining that he may likewise "practice 1 thing right" in helping a severely hit investor brand his money back, now that the firm volition be raided and, soon plenty, in that location will be no future in continuing concern at J.T. Marlin. Chris reluctantly agrees, and proceeds to escape the edifice in an endeavor to flee federal enforcement. Seth walks out to his automobile, deciding what to practise with his life now that his ties with J.T. Marlin are finished. As he departs in his automobile, several FBI cars, buses, and tow trucks enter the parking lot, with agents storming out prepare to raid the building.

Cast [edit]

  • Giovanni Ribisi as Seth Davis
  • Vin Diesel fuel as Chris Varick
  • Nia Long as Abbie Halprin
  • Nicky Katt as Greg Weinstein
  • Scott Caan equally Richie O'Flaherty
  • Ron Rifkin as Estimate Marty Davis
  • Jamie Kennedy as Adam
  • Taylor Nichols equally Harry Reynard
  • Pecker Sage as Amanuensis Drew
  • Tom Everett Scott every bit Michael Brantley
  • Ben Affleck as Jim Young
  • John Griesemer as Concierge
  • David Younger as Marc
  • Russell Harper, Mark Webber, and Christopher Fitzgerald as Kids
  • Donna Mitchell as Mrs. Davis
  • AndrĂ© Vippolis every bit Neil
  • Jon Abrahams as Jeff
  • Will McCormack as Mike
  • Jared Ryan as Casino Steve
  • Anson Mount, Kirk Acevedo, Seth Ullian, and Eddie Malavarca equally Brokers
  • Lisa Gerstein equally Sheryl
  • Ross Ryman every bit Isaac
  • Peter Maloney as Dr. Jacobs
  • Marker Moshe Bellows equally John Fineman
  • Alex Webb as FBI Director
  • Daniel Serafini-Sauli every bit Banker Steve
  • Taylor Patterson as Sara Reynard
  • Michael McCarthy as Max Reynard
  • Marsha Dietlein as Susan Reynard
  • Siobhan Fallon as Michelle
  • Desmond Harrington as JT Marlin Trainee (uncredited)
  • Stephen Scibetta as JT Marlin Senior Broker (uncredited)

Reception [edit]

Box role [edit]

The movie opened in the Us on February 18, 2000, alongside Hanging Up, Pitch Black and The Whole Nine Yards, grossing $6.7 million on its opening weekend. Somewhen, the film grossed $17 one thousand thousand domestically and $eleven.viii million in other territories, with a worldwide total of $28.8 million.[2] [4]

Disquisitional response [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 66% based on reviews from 101 critics. The site's consensus is: "Its ending is disappointingly tidy, but Boiler Room boasts only plenty abrupt writing and brisk pacing to make getting at that place worthwhile."[5] On Metacritic the motion picture has a score of 63 out of 100 based on reviews from 34 critics, indicating "mostly favorable reviews"[6] Audiences surveyed past CinemaScore gave the movie a course C+ on scale of A to F.[7]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Dominicus-Times gave the film three.5 out of 4 stars and wrote: "Has the loftier-octane feel of real life, closely observed."[eight] Emanuel Levy of Variety magazine gave the moving picture a mixed review, he noted the influence of Oliver Rock'southward Wall Street, and said it "begins extremely well equally a saga of greed and conspicuous consumption, but gradually loses its bite." Levy as well praised Affleck for his performance.[9] James Berardinelli of ReelViews gave it 3/iv and chosen it "A compelling movie-going experience." Berardinelli praises the attending to particular say the film achieves "the same sort of insight into stock brokering that Glengarry Glenn Ross offered into sales. In fact, this aspect of the moving-picture show is what makes Boiler Room a compelling movie-going feel. The characters and plot become secondary to the setting and atmosphere."[10]

See also [edit]

  • Span financing
  • Boiler room (business concern)
  • Glengarry Glen Ross
  • The Pursuit of Happyness
  • The Wolf of Wall Street
  • The Large Short
  • Rogue Trader
  • Margin Telephone call

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Boiler Room". British Board of Film Nomenclature. 2000-03-09. Retrieved 2013-06-x .
  2. ^ a b c Banality Room at Box Role Mojo
  3. ^ Hagan, Joe (Oct 28, 2007). "The Sucker Wears a Wire; How'southward a lowly day trader to survive in the new, loftier-stakes Wall Street? Crook. So flip". New York.
  4. ^ "Boiler Room (2000) - Financial Information". The Numbers.
  5. ^ Boiler Room at Rotten Tomatoes
  6. ^ "Boiler Room". Metacritic.
  7. ^ "Cinemascore". Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  8. ^ Ebert, Roger (February 18, 2000). "Banality Room Movie Review & Film Summary (2000)". Chicago Sun-Times.
  9. ^ Levy, Emanuel (7 February 2000). "Boiler Room". Variety.
  10. ^ Berardinelli, James. "Boiler Room, The". Reelviews Movie Reviews.

External links [edit]

  • Boiler Room at IMDb
  • Boiler Room at Box Role Mojo

woodyardinne2002.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boiler_Room_(film)

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