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BY ANDY KLEIN
GRADE: It's worth $6.50
Steven Soderbergh is definitely on a roll with his last four features
-- Out of Sight, The Limey, Erin Brockovich, and Traffic -- all
smart films, often inspired, almost always interesting. (Id
toss in his hilarious, definitely offbeat 1996 Schizopolis as well.)
Out of Sight was the sort of perfect commercial confection that
should have been a huge hit, yet somehow it didnt really find
its audience until it came out on video. The Limey was designed
to be a small-scale chamber piece, so it wasnt until Erin
Brockovich that the still-young director -- all of 37 -- scored
the kind of major, big-studio success that will assure his bankability
for years.
Still, Erin Brockovich seemed something of a retreat: Soderbergh
kept a rein on his favorite stylistic devices and signatures. It
was a work more of intelligence than inspiration, a remarkable application
of skills to one of the most cliché-prone, formulaic genres
out there.
Now, with Traffic, Soderbergh seems to be a bit more confident
again about exercising his style within a big-budget Hollywood production
(as he was in Out of Sight). This ambitious film tries to weave
a panoramic view of the drug trade by following three loosely interconnected
plot threads.
The first story concerns Montel (Don Cheadle) and Ray (Luis Guzman),
two DEA agents trying to break up a huge drug-smuggling operation
from the U.S. side of the border. They bust Eduardo (Miguel Ferrer),
who leads them to Carlos (Steven Bauer), a big-time importer and
social leader in San Diego. Carloss wife, Helena (Catherine
Zeta-Jones), has no idea her husband is a crook. But, with her husband
in jail and herself facing the imminent destruction of their finances
and their future, Helena -- in a sort of ironic feminist twist --
manages to take over where her husband has left off.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the border, two Tijuana policemen
-- Javier (Benicio Del Toro) and Manolo (Jacob Vargas) -- are walking
the tenuous line between law and crime: they attempt to be honest
cops by helping the countrys leading military drug buster
(Tomas Milian) until they realize that he is simply wiping out one
cartel to bolster the fortunes of another.
And back in the States, respected judge Robert Wakefield (Michael
Douglas) takes the job of national drug-enforcement czar. Ironically,
he and his wife (Amy Irving) are in complete denial about the obvious
fact that Caroline (Erika Christensen), their privileged 16-year-old
daughter, has a drug habit.
Soderbergh intercuts these three stories, all of which are different
aspects of one big story -- a portrait of the economics and human
conflicts that make the drug trade completely unconquerable. The
film is careful not to make harsh, knee-jerk judgments against the
end users or even against some of those who profit. The amount of
money involved is simply too insane, and its impossible for
some of the players to stake out a perfectly clear moral. The seemingly
honest guys on the street, like Javier and Manolo, are in a milieu
so corrupt that there simply is no well-lit path of righteousness.
Wakefield thinks hes a tough, honest crime fighter, but he
is being used by the White House as a public relations ploy, and
even he flinches only slightly at the offer of special allowances
for his daughter.
Its not a particularly optimistic picture, nor should it
be. In a country where "the drug problem" is such a convenient
scapegoat for far deeper societal ills and where being "tough
on drugs" is a political mantra so powerful that even many
self-styled liberals consider it a valid reason to revoke civil
liberties, there is little reason to be optimistic. Yes, drugs create
social problems; but the demand for and broad usage of drugs are
also created by social problems. What Traffic does is to speak that
which for any politician would be unspeakable: the war on drugs
is not only losing, it never had a chance.
In many ways, Traffic makes a cogent case. But its also a
disappointing film. Its easy to see why advance word-of-mouth
is so strong: its two-thirds of a terrific movie. That is,
the Del Toro story and the Cheadle/Guzman/Zeta-Jones story suggest
how altogether great Traffic could have been; but the Douglas story
is so much less compelling that its hard to believe its
part of the same film.
In fact, both in style and in content, the Douglas thread feels
almost like a TV movie: good liberal intentions, few rough edges,
and some vaguely hopeful speeches at the end. But the setup -- new
drug czar is so intent on cleaning up the world that he cant
see the corruption in his own home -- is too pat. And, likewise,
its details seem fake and forced compared to the rest.
In general, despite the apparent research Soderbergh and screenwriter
Stephen Gaghan did, their resolution to Carolines drug problem
simply does not jibe with the real world. Were supposed to
believe that, by throwing the kid into rehab, theres some
progress being made. But she doesnt want to kick the habit.
Like lots of people, she enjoys being a junkie. Anybody with experience
of junkies quickly realizes that rehab is worthless if the person
doesnt see that his or her habit is a problem. You clean up,
you get out, and you simply start over again.
There is a second problem -- a single disturbing moment in Soderberghs
treatment of Carolines descent into the abyss. We see this
rosy-cheeked, middle-class kid take to dispensing sex in exchange
for drugs -- a valid signifier of her degradation. But Soderbergh
pulls out the oldest, vilest, most notoriously evocative image to
emphasize this: shes not just sleeping with a street criminal;
shes sleeping with a big black buck of a street criminal.
Go ahead: say Im being "P.C." Point out that in
the part of the country where the story takes place, low-level urban
drug dealers are overwhelmingly African American. That still doesnt
change the fact that the image of the big, virile, dangerous black
man having his way with the flower of white womanhood is a racist
provocation that immediately evokes memories of Birth of a Nation.
I dont think that Soderbergh intended to be suggesting, "Not
only is she selling herself; shes selling herself to one of
them." But, within the historical context of such images, it
would be naive to deny that the audience will take the implication
that this marks an even deeper shame.
The general patness and flatness of the Douglas plot is in striking
contrast to the rest of the film. Douglas tries gamely, but he doesnt
get much to work with. Mores the pity, because the bulk of
the movie is filled with wonderful actors getting to do wonderful
stuff. (Well leave out the distasteful sight of the loathsome
Republican demagogue Orrin Hatch in one party scene.) Miguel Ferrer
is perfect, as always, and once again Soderbergh figures out how
to use Cheadle and Guzman infinitely better than anyone else has.
Zeta-Jones is excellent as a classic film noir "tough babe."
But its Del Toro who really gets to strut his stuff with a
subtle, ambiguous, and riveting performance. In a field of top-notch
actors, hes the one whom you remember days later.
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