Traffic
(2000)
Rated R
Starring: Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones,
and Benecio Del Toro
Rating:

out
of

|
For quite a long time, the
United States Government has waged a "war" on
drugs that's been full of political posturing, rhetoric and nearly fruitless
effort. For all of the money spent, lives lost and destroyed, not much
has changed in terms of the demand for illegal narcotics.
Traffic,
a film by Stephen Soderbergh, examines various aspects of the drug trade
through three different -- but not entirely separate -- storylines.
One features Michael Douglas as Robert Wakefield, an Ohio judge who's
been named the U.S. Drug Czar, responsible for waging the war on drugs
from a political vantage point but who can't keep his own daughter off
drugs. The second involves Benecio Del Toro and Jacob Vargas as a pair
of Tijuana
cops who get involved with a war between drug cartels. In the third storyline,
Catherine Zeta-Jones' cocaine-dealing husband has been fingered by an
government informant and she takes matters into her own hands to protect
her family.
The film handles some controversial subject matter, but does so without
resorting to any direct preaching to the audience. The movie's content
-- needless deaths, wasted lives and rampant corruption on both sides
of the law -- does enough to relate the feeling that the war on drugs,
at least in its current incarnation, is a ridiculous exercise in futility.
As long as a demand for drugs exists, there will be a nearly endless supply
available.
What keeps the movie watchable
-- and highly so -- are the performances from all involved. Michael
Douglas' degeneration from Mr. "It-can't-happen-to-my-family" to
a father who cries at the bedside of his drug-addicted daughter is fairly
effective. Benecio Del Toro won a "Best Supporting Actor" Academy
Award for his role has Javier Rodriguez and it's not hard to see why.
Don Cheadle is his usual excellent self as Montel Gordon, a DEA agent
who is protecting the drug informant (Miguel Ferrer).
Although it's not light entertainment, Traffic is a thought-provoking
movie that makes a lot of sense to those willing to listen to what it
has to say. Trivia: The
scenes that take place in the White House were shot on the set of
the television series The West Wing, which is a near-exact replica
(albeit wider, to allow for free movement of the cameras) of the actual
interiors of the White House's West Wing. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |