As soon as you expose a jewish child to a mass media he or she will grow up to be either a corrupted mafia lawer or
a Columbian drug money laundering banker.
Not exact matches
WHAT: In 1986, U.S. Customs agent Robert Mazur (Bryan Cranston) went undercover to expose a
money laundering scheme involving
Columbian drug lord Pablo Escobar by befriending one of his top lieutenants, Roberto Alcaino (Benjamin Bratt).
Seal turns every CIA directive or order into another
money - making opportunity, trading guns meant for the Contras to the
Columbians in exchange for cash, deliberately ignoring the consequences of his actions, both in the United States (the explosion of life - ruining
drug abuse tied to the cartels) and in South and Latin America (the tens of thousands of civilian deaths euphemized away as «collateral damage» in the
drug wars).
In between, you sprinkle another solid performance from Bryan Cranston, in an informative film, playing Robert Mazur, a U.S. Customs official who infiltrated a corrupt
money laundering scheme, run by
Columbian drug lord Pablo Escobar.