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Traffik (1989)

Traffik (1989)
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This four-hour, six-episode British miniseries, broadcast on Channel 4 in 1989 and in America on PBS's Masterpiece Theatre in 1990, provided the basis for Traffic, Steven Soderbergh's 2000 Oscar winner. Though Soderbergh and screenwriter Stephen Gaghan borrowed much of their plot and structure from the original, Traffik focuses on the European drug trade instead of the American one and utilizes England, Germany, and Pakistan as its major settings. One of the three primary plot strands involves Jack Lithgow (Bill Paterson), a member of the British Parliament, who discovers that his daughter, Caroline (Julia Ormond), is a heroin addict despite the fact that he leads the country's Drug Abuse Committee. In a parallel story line, Helen Rosshalde (Lindsay Duncan), the British wife of German drug smuggler Karl Rosshalde (George Kukura), must take over her husband's illegal operations after an associate turns state's evidence and Karl goes on trial. In the third interwoven segment, and the one that diverges the farthest from the plot of the American film, Pakistani poppy farmer Fazel (Jamal Shah) ingratiates himself to drug overlord Tariq Butt (Talat Hussain) in order to support his family after the Pakistani government, at the insistence of Lithgow and other British officials, cracks down on the subsistence-level farmers who supply the heroin trade with its raw materials. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi

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Starring:
Bill PatersonJulia Ormond, (more)
Director(s):
Alastair ReidAlastair Reid, (more)
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Traffik

This four-hour, six-episode British miniseries, broadcast on Channel 4 in 1989 and in America on PBS's Masterpiece Theatre in 1990, provided the basis for Traffic, Steven Soderbergh's 2000 Oscar winner. Though Soderbergh and screenwriter Stephen Gaghan borrowed much of their plot and structure from the original, Traffik focuses on the European drug trade instead of the American one and utilizes England, Germany, and Pakistan as its major settings. One of the three primary plot strands involves Jack Lithgow (Bill Paterson), a member of the British Parliament, who discovers that his daughter, Caroline (Julia Ormond), is a heroin addict despite the fact that he leads the country's Drug Abuse Committee. In a parallel story line, Helen Rosshalde (Lindsay Duncan), the British wife of German drug smuggler Karl Rosshalde (George Kukura), must take over her husband's illegal operations after an associate turns state's evidence and Karl goes on trial. In the third interwoven segment, and the one that diverges the farthest from the plot of the American film, Pakistani poppy farmer Fazel (Jamal Shah) ingratiates himself to drug overlord Tariq Butt (Talat Hussain) in order to support his family after the Pakistani government, at the insistence of Lithgow and other British officials, cracks down on the subsistence-level farmers who supply the heroin trade with its raw materials. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
305 mins

Complete Cast of Traffik


Director(s):
Alastair ReidAlastair Reid
Writer(s):
Simon Moore
Producer(s):
Brian Eastman
Categories:
Foreign
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    Member Reviews
     
    Cecelia R.

    This PBS miniseries offers a gripping story of how drug traffiking starts with a poor farmer and leads to the highest levels of society. Compared to the Hollywood movie, this British series offers a more compelling, complex cast of characters. There is so much more to contemplate in this 3-part series, that Hollywood's version, though a commercial success, failed to capture the depth of the original story. People who never saw the series were impressed with the movie. But the movie doesn't begin to compare with the complicated suspense of the original Traffik. If you haven't seen this mini-series, rent it. Goes without saying, but be sure to watch each of its three parts in order as the story builds.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Steven C.

    The 2000 movie (Traffic with a c) is an attempt to hack this mini-series (Traffik with a k) down to movie length. Though it succeeds in that, much crucial material is lost from the original story line. The casting in the movie is OK, but not nearly as good as this original mini-series. The story is intentionally disjointed, leading you to keep re-evaluating what you "know" about what's going on, and it's fascinating how the characters around the world keep influencing one another's lives, usually never having met one another. If you want to be done with it in two-and-a-half hours, go ahead and watch the movie. If you want to experience the whole story, see this mini-series. (The 2004 mini-series [Traffic with a c] is pretty good too. Though it shares some general elements with this original mini-series, it's more like a sequel than a re-telling of the original story.)

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    John M.

    Well-acted and most engaging story of the destructive impact of heroin on peoples' lifes.

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