PFS Film Review
Boiler Room


 

Boiler RoomIf a company needs money to promote a promising new product, a bank will ideally provide a bridge loan. If a bank turns down the loan, one alternative is a junk bond for sale on the open market and aggressive brokers to find buyers. This is the premise for Boiler Room, directed by Ben Younger, who drew from personal experience as an employee in such a firm to write the script. The film focuses on nineteen-year-old Seth Davis (played by Giovanni Ribisi), who dropped out of college but manages to make a living by getting college men to place bets on blackjack at his apartment in Queens. When Greg (played by Nicky Katt) visits his operation, he tells Seth that he could make a lot more money as a stockbroker at J.T. Marlin. Seth's father (played by Ron Rifkin) is concerned that his own career as a judge is in potential jeopardy because Seth is involved in an illegal gambling operation, and he urges Seth to get a better job. Accordingly, Seth joins J.T. Marlin, a securities firm of young white males who resemble horny fraternity boys on the prowl to make a score, except that the testosterone is sublimated into making ethnic slurs of competing pitchmen, showing muscle at bars after work, and milking moneyed white males of their life savings by appealing to their belief that a friendly voice on the telephone is opening the gateway to millionairedom. The term "boiler room" refers to a brokerage house that telemarkets using phones listed in the yellow pages to find suckers to buy stock or bonds for huge commissions, driving the price up just high enough so that the insiders involved in the scam can sell at a fat profit, whereupon prices fall, and innocent investors lose their shirts. (Thus, the name of the company refers to the big fish that the frat boys are supposed to catch.) Seth turns out to be very successful in pressuring clients over the phone to buy worthless paper, though he once takes credit for a sale even before he gets his broker's license. One of his victims, Harry Reynard (played by Taylor Nichols), loses an initial small amount but is nevertheless persuaded to invest (and quickly lose) more than $50,000, the amount set aside for a down payment on a house, whereupon his wife and two children walk out on him. Seth is chagrined over the consequences of his quest for respectability in a firm that he soon surmises is operating illegally. When Seth tells his father about his new job, the judge is apoplectic that his son is now ruining lives, but he suggests a way "not to get caught." Meanwhile, Seth uses his testosterone to date Abby, J.T. Marlin's African American $80,000-a-year receptionist (played by Nia Long), who is forwarding evidence of the scam to FBI agent Drew (played by Bill Nichols). When Seth is arrested, so is his father, and Seth agrees to a plea bargain in which he will collect incriminating evidence. Just before an FBI raid, he asks Michael (played by Tom Everett Scott), the manager of J.T. Marlin to return the $50,000 to his unfortunate client, and the film ends just before the FBI raid. Boiler Room is an update of Wall Street (1987) and Glengarry Glenn Ross (1992); indeed, staff at J.T. Marlin quote from the Wall Street dialogue verbatim during the film. The rap soundtrack, however, is too faint to provide social commentary, so socially-aware audiences will doubtless purchase the CD. A film about the greed of yuppies and those with more money than investing sense, Boiler Room's tagline is "Where would you turn? How far would you go? How hard will you fall?" Boiler room "chop shops" are today a top priority for the North American Securities Administrators Association to shut down. In the 1990s, as the stock market was going ever upward, Boiler Room's immediate message would have been to caution potential stock market investors to be wary of telephone solicitations. However, when Boiler Room opened in mid-February 2000, the stock market was taking a dramatic plunge, the very time when bargains were available for the very shrewd. MH

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