‘Dumb Money’: Should You Watch the Roaring Kitty Flick as GameStop Fever Returns?

by Ron Effertz

End followers of GameStop bull seller Roaring Kitty (aka Keith Gill) and the 2021 meme inventory/rapid squeeze saga will already know the ending of final 300 and sixty five days’s “Boring Money” from the starting up: He affords one final signoff on his new YouTube livestream and prevents posting on-line, doubtlessly endlessly, following about a extraordinarily crazy months of being within the highlight.

But the ending didn’t stick. After three years of inactivity, Roaring Kitty returned final month and commenced posting memes on Twitter, followed by Reddit posts about his GameStop (GME) inventory put apart. On Friday, he reemerged on YouTube for the first time since that 2021 signoff, confirming that he’s aloof alive—and that he used to be no longer, truly, the actor who portrayed him within the film.

“I’m positively no longer Paul Dano,” he acknowledged Friday. “I aloof haven’t viewed that film. I’ve viewed some clips.”

Roaring Kitty’s memoir clearly has no longer concluded. While the label of GME dipped Friday following his return circulation, the seller aloof holds a giant put apart between each inventory and choices. And his YouTube comeback helped assuage concerns that any person had hacked or taken over his accounts, or that his tweets and posts had exact been a mountainous goof.

But if, treasure Roaring Kitty, you continue to haven’t viewed the wide title-studded biopic per his 2020-2021 upward push and the broader GameStop meme inventory phenomenon, whereas you happen to effort staring at “Boring Money” now that we’re staring at a sequel unfold in exact-time?

Indubitably. I watched the film for the first time this week through Netflix, exact hours forward of Roaring Kitty’s YouTube return, and it aloof paints a compelling and entertaining image of his personality and procuring and selling mindset—and can again as a purposeful starting up repeat receive folks up because the exact-world saga continues.

In step with 2021’s “The Delinquent Network” by Ben Mezrich, author of an earlier book that impressed the film “The Social Network,” “Boring Money” no longer most efficient tells the memoir of Roaring Kitty and his mountainous wager on GameStop nonetheless additionally the Wall Avenue companies that bought dragged into the rapid squeeze and just among the retail traders who rallied all around the meme inventory.

It paints a properly-rounded and compassionate image of Gill as a monetary analyst who has developed this abnormal thesis concerning the downtrodden on-line sport retailer being undervalued. He takes it to the heaps through a livestream stuffed with catchphrases and cat imagery. Sooner than prolonged, Gill’s unexpected revolution is threatening the Wall Avenue giants.

Dano is a important actor, and he captures many of the nuance of Gill that we seen in his hours-prolonged livestreams, even though the “Fablemans” actor can’t barely match the manic energy of the exact deal. Given Gill’s possess wild efficiency Friday, I will’t blame Dano for falling a minute trying recreating that magnetic, dwell-streamed entice.

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Pete Davidson and Paul Dano (from left) in “Boring Money.” Image: Sony Photos

He’s complemented by a wide ensemble solid that capabilities Seth Rogen, The US Ferrera, Cut Offerman, Shailene Woodley, and Pete Davidson.

Rogen and Offerman list important hedge fund managers Gabe Plotkin and Ken Griffin, respectively—and whereas no longer within the comedic roles we on the general know these actors from, the film sharply characterizes them as out-of-contact elites thru their lavish spending and callous push apart for retail traders. (The exact-lifestyles Griffin wasn’t very elated about it.)

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Cut Offerman and Seth Rogen (from left) in “Boring Money.” Image: Sony Photos

“Boring Money” retains a active tempo, whilst director Craig Gillespie tries to cram too great into roughly 100 minutes. There are quite a bit of threads being pulled right here, and the retail investor experiences in most cases feel excessive—now to no longer level to overly dramatic. By the time the meme inventory pattern explodes, “Boring Money” has to stagger to suit within the relaxation of the mountainous headline-grabbing events with out overstaying its welcome.

Even so, “Boring Money” offers a nuanced and approachable retelling of the chaotic saga. It’s a cohesive recap that balances Roaring Kitty’s mountainous personality with a more human edge, all whereas preserving things light-weight and entertaining enough for viewers who aren’t monetary experts.

Edited by Ryan Ozawa.

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