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Review: Blow 67

Blow is a good movie. The minute George Jung (played by Johnny Depp) says in a voice-over that "everything is perfect," you know the roller coaster that is his life is about to start rocketing downhill. From The French Connection to Traffic to this week's example, drug movies are almost always apocalyptic, with dizzying rizes and falls. And the falls are always -- always -- signaled by DEA and FBI blue-helmeted SWAT teams battering down doors and shrieking "go, go, go!," one of the standard cinematic cliches of our time. Hollywood -- where drugs are probably as popular as in any other neighborhood, if you believe the police blotter -- never quite knows what to make of drugs, or how to portray the drug culture. In some ways, this movie is about that mixed message. Spoilage warning: plot is discussed, not endings. Add your own review. (Read more.)

Drugs -- especially coke -- have been associated since the 60s with celebrity and glamour. To say the least, this has always sent a confusing message to the kids who are supposed to stop using them.

The Depp character predicts that once musicians start using coke, everybody else will fall in line. He was right. Actors weren't far behind. Moralists and politicians have never quite caught up to this odd American reality, the strangely glamorous cachet given drugs in this culture.

Traffic raised the question of whether our insane and costly drug policies can ever work. But that movie made sure that all its uses and peddlers were either grotesque villains or tragic victims awaiting redemption.

Blow doesn't take itself so seriously as a drug-message movie. It's more an appealing, sometimes powerful portrait of a doomed character of a particular era and environment, in which drug profits rode a tidal wave of middle-class and college-kid money.

Depp's Jung isn't a bad guy, just an oblivious one caught up in the swirl, not really in the same league as the guys he gets tangled with. He's a good-natured, good-hearted loser who rides the wave, then takes the inevitable fall. Like Traffic, this movie takes a bleak view of the government's desperate and ineffective war on drugs.

But Blow isn't really about drugs per se, at least not most of the time. It's about that strange period in American life when drugs became both celebrated and ubiquitous, even as laws and law enforcement attempts to stem the tide became more frantic, ineffective and Draconian.

The movie is based on a more-or-less real life drama (the real-life Jung's ravaged, haunted face pops up at the end, a nice move). A guy from Massachusetts heads for California, can't believe the babes and drug appetites, and ends up yakking with the celebrated Columbian druglord Pablo Escobar and shuttling truckloads of grass and cocaine in and out of the U.S. in suitcases, planes and boats. He has so much cash piled around his boat in boxes that he has to buy a new boat.

The 60s and 70s settings and styles are terrific (the soundtrack is also great, kicking off appropriately with the Rolling Stones and including Lynyrd Skynyrd and Bob Dylan). It's a perfect role for Depp, too, and he handles it easily. Ray Liotta plays Jung's doting but heartbroken father Fred, weak in the face of the money-grubbing shrew he married, who watches helplessly as his only son hits the wall. Their relationship, well portrayed, effectively sets up Jung's own sad fate.

Ultimately, Blow is a morality play about loss and betrayal, lost chances, and the unthinking ways in which people toss their lives away. Its opening shot makes clear that this is a story of reckoning, as mass-marketed movies about drugs probably have to be to get past Hollywood squeamishness and into the suburban megaplexes. (The producers said they couldn't even mention the word "drugs" in the trailers to get a "PG" rating for the preview.)

The message is always more or less the same. If you get caught up with this stuff, you will get burned badly, ultimately losing everything of value in your life, if not your life itself. It seems inevitable that the next phase will be people dealing and selling drugs (like sex) over the Net, if they aren't already.

Blow does veer off-track when Jung meets and marries a spoiled Columbian brat (Penelope Cruz) and fathers a child. Naturally, the arrival of a daughter makes Jung see the light. Is it too late to reform? (What do you think?) The relationship between Depp and Cruz never really has time to develop, though, or even make much sense, though it's critical to the film's despairing and emotional payoff. Somehow, we are not the least bit surprised when Jung's wife turns into -- you got it -- a money-grubbing shrew.

Blow is worth seeing. Despite the fact that it can't always make up its mind precisely what it's about, the movie is more than saved by Depp's heartbreaking performance. He humanizes the drug culture and makes us feel as if any of us, at that time, might easily have gotten pulled into it.

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Review: Blow

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yes, you can buy drugs... err, I mean poisonous non-consumables, on the net from the fine folks at JLF [jlfcatalog.com].

    Their offerings include DXM, a few legal variants of illegal drugs like DMT and 2CB, as well as psilocybin mushroom grow-kits. All completely legal, although, I'm sure ordering from them might draw some unwelcome attention.

    They also have the funniest product disclaimer I've ever seen:

    THE LONGEST DISCLAIMER YOU'VE EVER SEEN

    Any seed prohibited as a noxious weed, or other, by law, is supplied to the consignee for nonsowing purposes only. By ordering such seed, the customer agrees to the use of such seed for nonsowing purposes only. Void where prohibited; check your local laws. All merchandise sold in this catalog is poisonous and not intended for internal consumption, external absorption or other routes of ingestion by humans or animals. Keep all JLF products (and any empty plastic bags they may have came in [asphyxiation]) out of the reach of children and those less responsible for their own actions. All merchandise is classified as nonconsumable. Do not eat. Do not use in any manner unauthorized by JLF. JLF assumes no liability for any misuse or abuse of its products. For example: (for those litigious types who exist solely to keep the human aspect of Murphy's Law alive) Do not take orally (into your mouth) as a food, a beverage, a chew, a toothpick, a nutritional supplement, a medicine, a drug or an agent of suicide. Do not eat, drink, inject, inhale, insert, absorb, snuff, snort, smoke, slam or ingest in any way. Do not stick, put, or throw into your or another person's mouth, nose, ear, eye, anus, urethra, vagina or any other orifice or port-of-entry that may exist on your or another person's body. Do not allow any carbonbased product to become moist, then allow it to decompose with a pathogenic microorganism, then allow the foul black rot to come in contact with your body, (especially mucous mem membranes) or insert into the orifices previously mentioned, thereby causing an infectuous dis-ease. Do not do that. Also, do not do this: Do not deploy any of JLF's products as weapons of war or tools for violence, such as dangerous high speed projectiles aimed at people or property. Do not use for tinder to start a fire to commit arson or to burn yourself or another or any public or private property. Do not leave lying on the floor to trip over or slip on to incur personal injury. Obviously, there is not enough room here to list all the possible "do nots". If, after reading all of this, you find that you still can not keep from harming yourself or others or their property with JLF's products, then you should probably go back to bed and stay there the rest of your life. Then again, on second thought; DO NOT GO BACK TO BED AND STAY THERE FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE! JLF will not be liable for any injuries or misfortune incurred from attempting to stay in bed for the rest of your life because you somehow thought we authorized it here. By the way, prices subject to change without notice.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    You criticise Shoeboy and accuse him of dating 12 year olds, then sign your own post 'perv'.

    What sort of post-modernism is this?
  • That's a bad idea. If the post office scans your packages and can't determine what's in them, they will crack them open. At best, you'll get a card back that says "You cannot send certain ILLEGAL items through the mail" (happened to a friend). At worst you could be arrested.

    A couple of college students performed a study of what can be sent through the US postal service. Slashdot even linked it awhile back.

  • by Hrunting ( 2191 ) on Sunday April 08, 2001 @07:03AM (#307288) Homepage
    Like Traffic, this movie takes a bleak view of the government's desperate and ineffective war on drugs.

    No it doesn't. It doesn't comment on the government's efforts at all. The only time the government is even portrayed is when Jung himself gets caught and put under the punishment of the law.

    Columbian

    When you're referring to the country of Colombia, the descriptive is 'Colombian'. I hope you don't anger too many patriotic cartels.

    This movie is first and foremost a biography. It's not necessarily a commentary on the drug culture. It's not commentary on government policy. It's a biography of one man's life showing the consequences of certain decisions, not the least of which is total alienation from everything he loved. The characters are very well-portrayed (despite what Katz says, the Cruz/Depp on-screen relationship is perfect, because it accurately mirrors the Jung/Mirta relationship) and the movie moves along at a snappy enough pace that you're not left idling on any one scene.

    What I didn't really like about the movie is that it never encouraged any sort of feeling about the protagonist. The movie tries at points to make you feel sorry for Jung or angry at Jung or understanding, but it never really comes through, because when he's a victim, it's really his own fault, and when he's not the taking advantage of various oppurtunities, you just see them as dumb but acceptable decisions. At the end, when I'm supposed to feel somewhat bad for this man who's lost literally everything, I don't, because everything wasn't taken away; he gave it all away. I end up feeling worse for the father than for anyone else, simply because he's the only one who constantly gets the shaft (by no fault of his own).

    In all, Blow is a worthwhile movie to see, but it's not a commentary on drugs like Traffic. Depp's not going to win any Oscars for his portrayal of Jung, even though it's a relatively good one, simply because the audience really isn't all that moved. Everyone who walked out of the theatre with me basically said, "Eh, it was a good film, but I wasn't really affected by it."

    YMMV.
  • Um, no, smugglers blues is definitely NOT the theme to Miami Vice - that had some staccato techno-synth theme.
  • and why are you so small-brained that you use words like "mullet"??? Where did that word come from anyway? It just surfaced in the last few years.

    "Too bad he has a mullet hairdo through most of the movie" - what the fuck is that supposed to mean? Everyone should have their head shaved and their eyebrows pierced these days? Fuck off you little dumbass.


  • if this is for real, but read a story from a western paper saying dealers much prefer the Net, once they personally establish ID and contact, then use mail with special, sniff-proof wrappings..but if true, why aren't law enforcement types and others shrieking about it. It certainly seems plausible.
  • Summer 2000 it was the three RAVE/Ectasy movies (Groove, etc.). Then comes Traffic, Requiem and Blow. Are drugs becoming more significant in American culture? I don't think so.

    I think the new movies are capturing the drug experience better- the joy and the despair. They are less cops-and robber morality tale and more user experiences.
  • by Shoeboy ( 16224 ) on Sunday April 08, 2001 @07:16AM (#307293) Homepage
    Jon,
    I don't see movies for the plot. I don't see them for the rich acting. I don't see them for the skillful handling of complex issues.

    I see films because they're a cheap date that doesn't require advance planning.

    But your reviews do not take this into consideration. Your reviews do not tell me whether this is a movie I should take Heidi Wall [stonehenge.com] to. You seem to be under the impression that I go to movies for my own pleasure. Let me correct that impression - unless the film is playing at the "Lusty Lady Theatre", I probably won't find it terribly interesting.

    I propose a simple remedy - put in a date scale. Something like this:
    1. Bad date flick. Title contains the words "Terror", "Justice" and/or a roman numeral greater than III.
    2. Average date flick. She won't talk smack about your taste in films, but won't be impressed either.
    3. Above average date flick. This is perfect for a non-Heidi female, but not quite good enough for the sweet divine perfection of a woman that is Heidi Wall.
    4. Good flick. Heidi will want to talk about this film afterwards, giving you a great excuse to go get a cup of coffee together instead of having to drive her home.
    5. Superior flick. Heidi will lash you furiously with a riding crop and then make you unlace her shoes with your teeth.


    So Jon, can we get this scale added to your reviews? Cause once this weakness is ironed out, you will stand as the greatest film critic since Siskel.

    --Shoeboy
  • "oooh, feel sorry for me because I'm a drug dealer! oooh, feel sorry for me because I'm a complete f*ck up!"
    I don't know.. there were several parts of this movie that made me laugh, but for the most part I just felt like I was watching a darker version of that *other* johnny depp classic, 'fear and loathin in las vegas'
    at least that one wasn't about feeling sorry for someone.
  • Ted Demme has never had it easy. From good (but not great) movies like Life and Beautiful Girls, he's been living in the shadow of his uncle Jonathon Demme, who directed what perhaps might be the best thriller ever made, Silence of the Lambs.

    Finally, he's on his own. He did it right. He made the movie he's wanted to make, and he did a good job with it.

    Is Blow perfect? Nope, it gets into a groove and slips out of it too easily, like a faulty transmission. But it's important to note how GREAT the groove is that he carries in the 2nd act of this movie. From around the thirty minute mark up until Penelope Cruz shows up, this movie is absolute classic drug cinema (what's really scary is you could have a couple hundred movies in that catagory).

    Johnny Depp, Mr. 21 Jump Street himself, proves yet again what a fantastic actor he is, and I hope he gets accolades from this performance. He IS George Jung, and the heartbreaking final act of this movie really got me.

    Other truly notable performances come from one of Jung's parents, the amazing Ray Liotta, who gives the film a sense of 'Goodfellas' that the movie can't help but be compared to. A drug movie that spans a persons life, from the great times to the busts and the backstabbings. Paul Reubens also does a great job as Derek Foreal, the Californian connection.

    I for one highly recommend this movie. For no other reason than to enjoy the greatness of the 2nd act and the heartbreaking finale. A few over-the-top performances (Cruz, in particular) try to weigh the movie down but Depp holds it together, along with Demme's great direction. One of the best movies to come along all year.

    My rating: 7.5 out of 10

  • It's not like Scarface.

    There are some similar elements (drugs, DEA, etc) but George is not really a bad guy. He doesn't kill anyone and doesn't want to. He's loyal to his friends and doesn't really screw people over while he gets screwed constantly by others, including the friends he defended.

    Scarface *is* a bad guy. He doesn't mind screwing people, or stealing, or killing. He's a very different character.
  • I dont know about the big time movers (like Depp's character) but that certainly would be true for small dealers. I know there are people on campuses using ICQ of all things to communicate meeting times and amounts. People dont want to say "quarter of dope" over the phone, so they're using the internet. I wouldnt trust either.

    As for the movie, I loved it. Saw it friday night. One previous comment described it as played out like an A&E biography. I totally agree.
    I don't think it would be safe to compare the movie to Traffic. Both are masterpieces for different reasons. Traffic gave you a look at every side of the spectrum on the drug trade. The FBI werent necessarily the "bad guys" in traffic. Blow gave you the inside look at the biggest coccaine mover of the 70's. Whether people agree with what he did or how he did it, people will see it and like it because everyone (unless its their day job) is facsinated with the fact that if you have a plane, you can do whatever the hell you want.
  • Bad date flick. Title contains the words "Terror", "Justice" and/or a roman numeral greater than III.
    Actually, I have read (probably in Maxim) that horror movies are actually a good idea if you're trying to get some. The reason is that the fear/suspense response is chemically similar to passion, and one can be subconsciously confused for the other. So you may actually be somewhat likely to be lashed with a riding crop after taking Heidi to a film with "terror" in the title.

    Just trying to help you out.

    --

  • I haven't seen Blow yet, but my first impression from watching the ad spots was that it's Scarface [imdb.com], remade twenty years later.
  • Exactly. This is a tribute to what's wrong with the drug war.

    Notice that each time he got caught and screwed over he was about to start a new life (or had just started) with his kid? He was on his way OUT of the drug business.

    It was the government's assualt on his life that ruined it, NOT the drugs themselves.
  • The theme to Miami Vice was composed (and performed?) by Jan Hammer [janhammer.com]. He's got a lengthy list of credits [janhammer.com] to his name, including a few computer games.

    -Sharv

  • I've never heard of anyone being able to successfully "sniff-proof" drugs. I've heard stories/seen movies/documentaries where the drugs are packed in coffee beans, boxed, and sealed airtight with special airproof material, and well-trained dogs were able to pick out the boxes from the other side of the room/warehouse/car. Dunno if this is all true or not, but I for one certainly wouldn't want to risk that. ;)
  • Disclaimer: I have not seen Blow nor Traffic.

    That being said, I would be willing to bet that neither film could hold up next to Requiem for a Dream [imdb.com].

    I think this movie would be of particular interest to the /. crowd, as it was directed by Darren Aronofsky [imdb.com], of Pi [imdb.com] fame.

    I won't tell you anything about it. You really just have to see it.
  • One thing I noticed in seeing this movie was that every woman in it, save the one who died, totally fucked Mr. Jungs life up.

    His mom, tortures his dad, turns him in.

    His wife, throws the party he gets busted at, turns him in, divorces him, takes away his daughter.

    His daughter, although not as evil as the rest never forgives him, and even in her adult life is unable to forgive someone who has nothing but love for her.

    After coming out of blow the message was clear, the only good woman was the dead woman.

    Tony

    ps: no I don't really think that, just reporting on the movie.

  • offtopic test..yeah
  • by Bill Daras ( 102772 ) on Sunday April 08, 2001 @07:21AM (#307307) Homepage
    (If this looks familiar, it's because I already posted this on ArsTechnica last night)

    What a fucking great film. Usually the high point of any movie-going experiance is to sit through the uber-cool previews, hoping in vain that the feature will live up to the excitement and emotional rush of the 2 minute ads.

    That was not the case here.

    I expected to get a Tomb Raider trailer, but was sorely disspointed. I did get to see a Pearl Harbor preview, but my initial excitement had an undercurrent of remorse, as I remembered not only all the men who died that day, but the fact Pearl Harbor is a love story...and it stars Ben Affleck.

    So, onto the movie....

    Blow begins as most great drug epics do, near the end, with a few choice words from the final chapter in the story...the much wiser...and older (damnit...Depp is one creepy fuck as a 60-something guy...the real George Jung looks like Terry Gilliam...Johnny is what I imagine Joan Rivers would look like after a nuclear war)

    This movie screams Major Fucking Drug Epic from the very beginning. No question about it. You know it's going to be one sweet ride, and you are itching for it to begin like the...oh never mind.

    The next 1.8 hours or so are spent following the rise and fall of Mr. George Jung and his magnificent empire in white. And green....lots of green.

    "We're going to need a bigger boat."

    Different hues, mind you, different hues.

    The eventual fall and collapse of Jung's business and life rather than a simple footnote, we see the whole fucking thing from beginning to end. No three minute montage for us this time. The final scenes in the prision are memorable as they are heartbreaking.

    Speaking of heartbreaking, I don't know what it was, but I found myself on the verge of tears during all the scenes with his daughter. This is what happens when you write real characters, not annoying or hopelessly "cute" caricatures that drag down the plot and the movie. Kudos to the man behind the keyboard...

    The cast was perfect and carried the movied perfectly. Franka Pontente was a surprise...you see her in the credits but forget she exists until you realize who she is in the film. Rachel Griffiths appears, amazingly in a mother role...7 years ago she was a 20-something in Muriel's Wedding now, a 50-60 year-old mother of Johnny Depp, sporting a Massachusetts accent. That's what I call range.

    Ray Liotta was brilliant...and if you thought he was only capable of being a mean, hardass character, then just wait and see this fucking movie.

    Paul Rubens as a gay hairdresser? Why not?

    A far cry from Pee-Wee Herman and "The Spleen". Yeah, he's pushing 50, but don't think for a minute he isn't one hell of an actor with one hell of a screen presence.

    Bobcat Golthwait! Bobcat! Where the fuck have you been?!!!! Good to see you! Thanks for not bringing Pauly Shore!

    To the point here...see this movie...if you have...see it again.

    End Transmission
  • I'm willing to bet most people are unaware of the fact Blow was filmed on varying film stock.

    The 60s scenes were filmed with '60s-era film

    The 70s scenes were filmed with '70s-era film

    etc, etc
  • Johnny's character was but a bit of a side-show.

    If you want to see how mean the thing can get, check out the Philadelphia Inquirer's 'Killing Pablo' website [killingpablo.com].

  • by Motor ( 104119 )

    It's a shame that no-one thought of a Katz article as an April fool joke, eg:

    Review: Blow
    Posted by JonKatz
    I liked it.

  • Traffic. While the acting was fine in traffic and the stylized filmwork was interesting, I tired of it quickly. Blow was more of my kind of movie. I thought the end was a bit much, I really don't want a "please feel sorry for me" vibe forced down my throat. It should have ended about 5 minutes early, without the whole daughter/senial thing.
    Oh...
    He has so much cash piled around his boat in boxes that he has to buy a new boat.
    He wasn't in a boat, he was in a rather large house, he was quoting Randel from Clerks.
    "I think we need a bigger boat"
    I know... Jaws. :)
  • That's pretty cool. Didn't know that.

    OK, you made me curious. What are the brands of film from the 60's and 70's, and is it possible to get them as a non-professional photographer?

  • Are Belong To Us
  • The review was right on, but the synopsis of the plot was lacking--When Jung says "We're going to need a bigger boat," he's not implying they were storing the money on a boat, or even that they were going to buy a boat to put their money on. In the narration to the scene, they state they had no place in the house to put the money.

    What they were doing was referencing a quote from Jaws [imdb.com]: "You're going to need a bigger boat." The use of the quote here is obviously to tie it back to the cultural phenomenon that was Jaws.

    Coming back to cultural inferences, aside from the change in clothing style, and the soundtrack transitions, there isn't a lot of period dating as would be expected through the use of selected television shows, product placement, etc.

  • by small_dick ( 127697 ) on Sunday April 08, 2001 @09:40AM (#307315)
    I had a friend in High School who:

    1) Started dealing a little pot in Jr. High;
    2) Started dealing coke in Sr. High;
    3) By the time he graduated, he had paid for a big house on the beach; with cash;
    4) Had 2 new Harleys and a couple sports cars (all cash);
    5) Several babes around the pool on any given weekend.

    But, people get jealous. One night as he rode his Harley home from a party, a rival dealer ran him down with a big four wheel drive -- then drove over his body 8-10 times.

    It's a shame, he was a really nice kid, and non-violent about the whole drug thing -- he just liked having money, respect (from his users/groupies, anyway) and a care free lifestyle.

    He was 22 years old when they got him, as I recall.

  • I agree.

    I always compare drugs with cars. Depending the person in the car, the car can be good or bad. It can serve as a transportation device or a killing device. Drugs are like that.

    www.smokedot.org

  • ... So it's no surprise that Katz's review is, too. If you want to know what actually happened to George Jung, read Bruce Porter's book, which has the same title of the movie. If you want a good summary of just how many ways this shallow film rips the truth for the sake of its cheap, hero-making plot, then stay away from Katz and read a real movie reviewer, like David Edelstein's piece [msn.com] on Slate. Blow isn't a serious look at a particular time in U.S. culture because it pays no attention to the wider social and political context. Dressing everyone up in period costume and having Lynyrd Skynyrd on the soundtrack doesn't do it. (Watch The Ice Storm, say, and then tell me Blow really evokes its time well.) It isn't a good biopic, because it lies to high heaven about what really happened to its lead character, for the sake of cheap sentiment and moralizing. It isn't (as Katz seems to think) a "morality play" either, because all the characters are one-dimensional. It isn't even a good thiller, and --- with the exception of Depp --- isn't marked by any good performances, either.
  • All in all I found the film to be pretty average. It played out like an A & E biography: "I went here, bought some weed, then sold it, then met this girl, then we went to mexico, then I bought more weed, then I went here, then I got beat up, then I went here, then I got beat up again"... It didn't seem like anything I hadn't seen before and what's worse, it kept feeling like- "Okay, NOW it's gonna get good!"... but it never did.

    The best parts of the movie dealt with his relationship with his father and daughter... Those were the only scenes were the movie really took off for me. It didn't help that there were so many cliches in the film (which, I guess is not the filmmaker's fault, since it's based on a true story, but really - how many movies have we seen where the criminal gets brought down because he falls in love with a crazy, greedy woman).

    The acting was good overall, I don't remeber any truely bad performances- Johnny Depp was good, Paul Reubens was good, even that goofy fat guy from the Kevin Smith movies was okay. Franka Potente pulled off a valley girl accent. Ray Liotta was good- he's been much better lately; he needs to stick to supporting roles and forget about clunkers like "No Escape".

    There were a few flairs of really interesting direction/editing, but the movie was mostly a collection of medium shots and two shots. The music was great, but film mostly came off as stiff to me.

    All in all, I liked it, but it's probably more of a matinee feature. Don't pay the full price!

    Josh Sisk
  • What I didn't really like about the movie is that it never encouraged any sort of feeling about the protagonist. The movie tries at points to make you feel sorry for Jung or angry at Jung or understanding, but it never really comes through, because when he's a victim, it's really his own fault, and when he's not the taking advantage of various oppurtunities, you just see them as dumb but acceptable decisions. At the end, when I'm supposed to feel somewhat bad for this man who's lost literally everything, I don't, because everything wasn't taken away; he gave it all away. I end up feeling worse for the father than for anyone else, simply because he's the only one who constantly gets the shaft (by no fault of his own).

    Yeah, I was consistantly amazed by the stupid decisions (if they were accurate, and not just Hollywood storytelling) Jung kept making. If I had $60 million dollars, I guarantee I would _not_ keep it all in one place.

    It really made all his success look like dumb luck.

    Josh Sisk
  • Shoeboy you wrote
    Hey, he can post anon if he wants. Although I've been out of the closet IRL for a couple of years, I've maintained a straight persona on /. just because of the advesarial nature of the site. I even went so far as to invent stories. Sad, I know, but I'll not cast stones at AC's. That's what anonymous posting is for, right? --Shoeboy I moderate myself up.
    in this story. http://slashdot.org/articles/01/02/06/0012207.shtm l So are you gay or where you faking it for that story. I wish you all would quit modding this fool up.
  • While during the 2-hour main part of the movie, I agree with what you said, Blow really cranked up the sentimentality during the last 10 minutes... I could hear people around me in the theatre sniffling and trying not to cry... Not necessarily because people identify or care about the character that much, but just because what you're watching is so sad (and has the cheesy whistful-piano music in the background as well that just screams "this is emotional! cry dammit!")
  • You would think that a movie title with the single word "Blow" would be sufficient.
  • Like many films of this type, alot of the film depends of the political attitude vs drugs. How much of the film is a fantasy, or a glorification of the lifestyle?

    (For Example, this classic scene: having a house literally filled with money neatly wrapped in plastic bundles with no place to put it.) I can see kids now, "y'know, if I could only avoid getting busted ..."

    a minor nitpick is the impression that the star of the film is depicted as the first person to introduce cocaine to the US, like the US was totally virgin territory.

    Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip

  • Why doesn't Hollywood portrait the drug-culture as presented in Holland (The Netherlands) ?
    The culture; marijuana not illegal.

    Maybe the rest of the world learns something from it.(or not)

    If you can read dutch, you may visit wiet.pagina.nl [pagina.nl] ie. all about marijuana.

  • I have pinpointed a specific sentence which I think is a grat example of why some people loathe Mr. Katz: Traffic raised the question of whether our insane and costly drug policies can ever work.

    He doesn't even really bother with laying out the facts, but just sort of skips over it to the conclusion he likes. (I agree with him here but that's beside the point) Katz, you need to separate fact and opinion with a better wall. Oh yes, I do want to see Blow later, seems interesting.

    --

  • What is this crap about how in drug movies:

    "...the falls are always -- always -- signaled by DEA and FBI blue-helmeted SWAT teams"?

    I don't recall any SWAT teams in Trainspotting. A classic movie about heroin, with lots of falls and NO SWAT teams. I highly recommend it.

    Somehow people manage to fall without federal ("blue-helmeted") aid.

  • Blow is based on the true story of George Jung, the man responsible for bringing cocaine into the United States and creating the market for it that still exists today. It stars Johnny Depp as Jung, and also features Paul Ruebens (formerly Pee Wee Herman) and Penelope Cruz. Jung started out dealing marijuana in California. His girlfriend was a stewardess and they used her to smuggle the dope because the airlines would never check a stewardess' bags. After a short time, he built a small empire of single engine planes and smuggling. When he got busted with over 600 pounds of pot, he ended up in jail with a cellmate who had connections with the Columbian drug lord Pablo Escobar. This connection led Jung to meeting with Escobar and that's how Escobar introduced cocaine to the U.S. in a BIG way. "Once the actors and the musicians start doing it, everyone else will catch on." This movie shows the ups and downs of this business, as Jung goes from rags to ritches to less than rags. He loses everything that he ever cared about and even more. Early on, his father tried to teach him that money is nothing compared to love. This movie is about stupidity and corruption, and someone trying to do the right thing the wrong way. Depp is wonderful, as always, as Jung. He is able to pull off humor and heartbreak at the same time. Too bad he has a mullet hairdo through most of the movie, but that's forgiveable since Blow is set in the 60's and 70's. Ray Liotta is also great as Jung's father. Penelope Cruz is really just eye candy for the guys, and her character isn't developed too well. She's a money-hungry drug dealer's girlfriend type. Unfortunately, Blow will be comapred to Traffic. Traffic is a far superior film, but I think Blow stands on it's own because it is a true story.
  • Scarface meets Donny Brosco. Pretty good.
  • Christ, they will be now.
  • Since someone mentioned these research chemicals I'd like to point people to Maps.org they are doing research into some of these chemicals/drugs and others.
  • It wasn't the government's assault on him that ruined his life! It was his own dumb-ass decisions. The whole theme of the movie was summed up when he went on that idiotic rant in front of the judge during his first arrest. He kept talking about how all he did was move some plants across an imaginary line. The judge replied, "your problem was that you didn't realize it was a real line and illegal plants." What happened was inevitable. It's just that he was too stupid to realize it. Over, and over again. . .
  • His first wife never betrayed him and he remained in love with her. His second wife did and really was the mirror image of his own mother.

    The theme of the movie wasn't that women screwed him. The theme was that he screwed himself. He ends up mimicking his own father all the while he was trying to avoid his fathers mistakes.

    The problem with the movie is about halfway through you realize he is an idiot. As sad as the ending is - it is more like feeling sad for the drunk who becomes homeless. You feel sad for someone screwing up their life. Yet your don't really feel sympathetic.

  • Actually while I liked Requiem for a Dream it suffered from the same problem as Blow. Neither had terribly sympathetic characters. I think that is fairly important. That's why I think Traffic is a vastly superior film. (It also has a much stronger script and better direction)

    I think Aronofsky will make an excellent director, but honestly, do you really feel that sorry for any of the characters in Requiem? They are all idiots. I mean you have an infection in your arm and instead of doing anything you keep shooting heroin or whatever the drug was he was using. Come on! Likewise their schemes? Amazingly stupid. I mean I can accept that their addictions were horrible. But the fact is that they knew things were going to hell and simply accepted it.

  • This movie shows the ups and downs of this business, as Jung goes from rags to ritches to less than rags.

    The whole time I watched this movie I couldn't help but think of the old Glenn Frey song "Smuggler's Blues":

    It's a losing proposition, But one you can't refuse. It's the politics of contraband, It's the smuggler's blues, Smuggler's blues.

  • Was it worth it to spend a mojority of your life lonely and broke for ~10 years of living like a king?

    Not only that, but he'd still be living like a king if he'd sheltered his money better. He had quit the business when his money was seized by the Panamanian government, and only returned to the business because he was newly broke. Some of us think we could have handled the situation a bit better, had we landed in that position...

  • ...to the TV series Miami Vice?
  • Well, first, I technically had no clue what I was watching. I just knew the movie was something about drugs. I wanted to see another movie, but Blow as the only movie showing at 10:30pm.

    But as I was watching it, I was like, "this movie is just damn pathetic." They wanted us to empathize with a drug dealer, they wanted us to feel sorry for this drug dealer, that piped drugs into the American society, and destroyed people's lives.
    &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp &nbsp The part that cracked me up the most, was when the movie ended, and the closing message said that Christine Sunshine Jung has still not visited her father in prison. That was just lame, and I just laughed my ass off when I read that.

    That and plus, it was a long ass movie. I usually never have to check my watch, but at this movie, I kept constantly checking my watch. I'm just glad that it wasn't boring. There were some scenes that were funny or somewhat interesting, like when they walked into that room filled with nothing but cash.

    Oh, one other interesting thing to note, was that as I was watching the movie, I thought that maybe I should have become a drug dealer. Damn, $60 million in the 1980s.. can you imagine how much that's worth now, 20 years later? If invested wisely, that load of cash, is probably worth over billions of dollars. I'd sure love some shares in Microsoft and Intel when they went public.
  • thanks very much for telling me all about what happens in blow, specifically what characters do, and about the daughter in the end. ass.
  • It's pointless to post so late but decency demands it - Blow is a terrible movie, inexplicably reviewed up by certain simpletons. I'm still mad about the loss of 15 dollars and two hours in my and my wife's lives. This is an entirely superficial, shaloow presentation of a boring and completely unsympathetic character. We're presented with no perceptable motivation for his actions except a childhood aversion to poverty and a rootless aversion to work. We're given no reason to believe that his dominance in the cocaine market was a result of anything besides good timing. He tells his father he's "really good" at what he does, but from what we're shown on the screen, all he does is act as a middle man and collect. The character fails to develop at all during the movie. We're told he is transformed by the birth of his daughter and subsequent drug-induced collapse, but his actions don't bear this out. He blames everyone but himself when he has face the natural consequences of his actions. Moreover, Depps performance is flat and uninspiring. Everyone is dressed real nice and immaculately coiffed, but only Penelope Cruz seems to really stretch to the point of actually giving a performance. There is no insight into the cocaine market, the criminal culture of smugglers (they do a lot of coke and there's so much money it's just SITTING AROUND - fascinating!) or what impact the coke explosion really had on society and culture. And the final hour of the movie drags and slows to an eventual snail's pace as Jung's life grinds to a predictably ignominous conclusion, leaving no moral or message other than that it's fun to make a ton of money without really working, but it sucks to get beat up and thrown in jail. Style triumphs over substance once again.

  • You really are getting paid per article you write aren't you?

    There are so many things you could be writing about, but no you have to waste /.'s space with non-geek stuff.

    Maybe salon.com isn't in as good of a shape as /. but maybe, just maybe you could go there and post your non-geek, trendy type reviews there (that are about 2 weeks to late, lol).

    Oh, and goto http://us.imdb.com and read Maltin's reviews there, maybe you'd learn something.
  • Possible Spoilers Ahead

    I saw this movie on Friday and also thought it was a pretty good flic. Even though it made the the drug selling culture look exciting and fun at times (ie. buying a house in the Carribean), it did not forget to remind you that you were dealing with crazy criminals(ie. when the Pablo character asks the pilot for pictures of his kids and where they go to school.)
    To me the movie came down to a final question of was it worth it? Was it worth it to spend a mojority of your life lonely and broke for ~10 years of living like a king? The movie obviously says no, but it the question that I have been wrestling with since I saw it on Friday.

  • This movie bored me.

    Blow is a good attempt, but has its share of problems that pushes this film into mediocre-land. An extra bit of bias was gained against Blow for me as I had also seen Memento earlier that day. Two different genres, but if you have an appetite for a new release, Memento is definitely worth a look. It had my friends and I enthusiastically dissecting it afterward.

    For me, Blow sat meekly in the shadow of other films that you can't help but think of while watching. Boogie Nights and Casino definitely come to mind.

    In fact, I'd call this film a poor man's Boogie Nights, removing the porn and focusing on drugs. George Jung (Johnny Depp) is the uber-drug-dealer who builds a virtual drug empire. Both films follow the same arc of 1. hero comes from modest beginnings to 2. rise to a crescendo followed by 3. a long, downward spiral. And it takes a long time for this to unfold in both films. But Paul Thomas Anderson lets us know where we are through the story and with an identifiable style. Blow does this with voiceover, and hits us over the head with such eye-rolling, watered down lines as "...and everything was perfect," which was the best way the film knew how to let the audience know that the shit was about to hit the fan.

    Blow chose not to show any of the customers of George's cocaine empire. The people using the cocaine were absent. Having George come in contact with the demand side of the supply/demand equation so he could see the big picture might have given the film a dramatic boost. However the movie chooses to ignore this, in my opinion, at great cost. The inner workings of his business are mostly hidden from view as well. What we're left with is George's interaction with drug partners, his parents, and his romantic interests--long on talk, short on walk.

    To top it off, Penelope Cruz does one the most melodromatic pieces of overacting I've seen since Sharon Stone in Casino. I wish I could go back in time to before I heard the breathtakingly beautiful Ms. Cruz open her mouth in this film.

    Again, my recommendation is skip Blow and find Memento in your local indie theater.

  • Well, recreational drug use is a fairly controvercial subject, and I am a bit hesitant about posting about it. But, here goes;

    I don't know much about drugs, but I _do_ know that drugs were used by many to reach "higher levels of consciousness". These people were not dumb, but rather articulate and intelligent individuals who sought to explore the human mind. Artists, genius's, all kinds of people used drugs.

    In the 30's/40's(? circa?) LSD was used as a psychiatric drug for the use of schitzophrenia(sp?). So called medical students then started using LSD as a way to understand the "disease". By the 60's LSD was a recreational drug, by which stage it's medicinal "advantages" were also debunked. These days it's a banned substance (figure that out... a miracle cure banned) My point is... All drugs are dangerous, open to abuse and misunderstanding. Drugs are not the problem, People are. Period.
  • congrats...
    -EvilMonkeyNinja
    a.k.a. Joseph Nicholas Yarbrough
    Security Grunt by Day
    Programmer by Night
  • 10. It said it was based on a true story and then substantially diverged with the true elements of that story. The Last half of the movie is almost completely fiction.(read the book).

    9. Those montage scenes. Yes, we can definitely tell that Ted Demme used to direct a lot of music videos.

    8. Johny Depp. Just like in "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," Depp showed he is just a pretty face with no range as an actor.

    7. The story told without showing. In the beginning, when they were looking for pot in Mexico, and they had an (ugh!!!) montage scene of people playing around at the pool. Then Johny Dipshit voices over with "We worked hard and we played hard." We'll have to take his word for it, because the film made it look like Spring Break on Padre Island.

    6. No good, raunchy sex scenes. Drugs are good because they help guys get laid. Sad but true. There was no good sex in the movie. Pretty tame for a movie called blow. That's the whole point of drug use, to get laid. Oh sure, Jung wasn't getting all the poontang he could from coked-up starlets. He was a decent family man. Ha!

    5. Building Sympathy for George Jung. Jung was no victim. He eventually got caught at the height of his career and enthusiastically cooperated with the Feds to entrap his former colleagues. In his book he was unrepentant.

    4. The friggin' daughter subplot. Drug Daddy Knows Best? What is this crap?

    3. It's two hours long! If a movie is bad, like this one is, making it longer just prolongs the agony. Anyone notice that Woody Allen's best early movies are about one and a half hours long?

    2. Blow? Blow me! Sorry, I just had to say it.

    And the number one reason Blow blew is...

    ...drum roll...

    Jon Katz's review! And a hearty bronx cheer for all the moderating morons who took off the points of the replies that complained that such a contemptibly uninformed and uninspired piece ever got featured, especially for such an unimportant movie.

    Excelsior,

    ME
  • Hmm... I'm personally a fan of the Zero Wing movie...

    For Great Justice
    and its third sequel...
    Terror: For Great Justice IV
    :)
    All your constitutional right are belong to us.
  • .. that film was nonsense. Depp hasn't done a decent film since Glazed [port5.com].

    Honestly John, you do come up with the most ridiculous and hot-air articles sometimes!

  • What a perverted goat fucker you are!
  • I thought this was a porn movie! Dammit!

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The Tao is like a glob pattern: used but never used up. It is like the extern void: filled with infinite possibilities.

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