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Luxe Star Outlook

Body Brokers movie review & film summary (2021)

Author

Mia Cox

Updated on March 09, 2026

Inspiring enough, I suppose, but during this tale of recovery the film’s real story slowly takes shape. At certain points, a narrator (Frank Grillo) cuts in to inform viewers that the rehab industry, as the result of ACA provisions, has boomed in recent years—pulling in more than $12 million dollars a year in the Southern California area alone. A new breed of scam artist has arrived on the scene to grab as much of that money as possible by getting patients into the beds at rehab clinics by any means necessary where their insurance can be billed for outrageous costs ($2,000 for a simple urine test) that they, and sometimes the patients themselves, will receive kickbacks on. Wood is one of these so-called “body brokers” and brings the recovered Utah into the game. After some initial trepidation, Utah quickly falls in and is soon cheerfully driving van loads of addicts over to an unscrupulous doctor (Peter Greene) to receive implants of a medically dubious but highly billable nature. Utah then begins to have second thoughts about what he is doing but by that time, it may be too late for him to get out clean, so to speak.

This is the kind of muckraking thriller that Steven Soderbergh could do in his sleep by peeling back the curtains while at the same time maintaining the human drama. But while the premise here is interesting enough, our hero is decidedly less so. And once the story becomes less interested in unveiling systemic institutional abuse, and it simply focuses more on his journey to the dark side and back. We've seen all of this many times before. The film’s ending is an even bigger problem, as it tries to land on a darkly realistic note but which proves to be too abrupt and unsatisfying for its own good.

And yet while “Body Brokers” never quite comes together, it does have enough things going for it. Michael Kenneth Williams is quite good as Utah’s guide to the seamy side of the recovery business, one that encompasses everything from essentially selling patients to the highest-bidding rehab center to digging holes for those who get out of line along the way. Frank Grillo is also entertaining as he delivers his sardonic narration and turns up on camera as well in a role that I will leave for you to discover. And although neither one gets much to do, Jessica Rothe and Melissa Leo both do strong work as those who represent the non-exploitative side of the rehabilitation world. The film's most memorable performance comes from veteran character actor Peter Greene—he is sensational in a brief turn as a cadaverous-looking doctor who is in on one of the scams until he makes the mistake of getting greedy.