Sentences with phrase «time drug dealer who»

Emile Hirsch is the good - hearted but luckless small - time drug dealer who needs his mother killed in order to get the insurance money that will save his life.
François is a small time drug dealer who wants to call it quits.
«I can't tell if you're really motherfucking dumb or really motherfucking smart,» FBI agent Don Cheadle tells Brendan Gleeson, a cop in west Ireland with whom he's reluctantly tracking some big - time drug dealers who've set up shop in the Galway region.

Not exact matches

He describes one of his employees, John, who is of Cape Verdean descent: «He was a drug dealer, and did some time for that.
So prison populations soared, and mandatory sentences forced often reluctant judges to imprison first - time offenders, many of them lower - level «mules» who were merely carrying the drugs for the dealers, who were seldom touched.
She's an unremarkable DA who made her name on going after DUI while cutting deals with no prison time for drug dealers.
He joins up with a drug clinic worker played by Elizabeth Olsen and slowly begins piecing together the identity of his jailer: a rich and rather effete sadist (Sharlto Copley of «District 9») who knew Joe a long time ago, and who now lives like a drug dealer from an»80s cop thriller.
Gist: Set in a small West Virginia mining town in the foothills of Appalachia, the book tells the story of small - time drug dealer Cole Freeman (Trotter), who is driven to action and redemption in response to a set of unexpected circumstances that threaten to tear apart the close - knit fabric of family, friendship, land and history that binds everyone, and everything, he loves.
Continuing a string of interesting characters, McConaughey was a police officer moonlighting as a contract killer who is hired to off the mother of a small - time drug dealer (Emile Hirsch) in William Friedkin's darkly comedic thriller «Killer Joe» (2011), a role that earned him an Indie Spirit Award nomination for Best Actor.
Walter and Jesse eventually sign up with a big - time drug dealer, who turns out to be crazy.
The film shows the Point of View of a young white drug dealer in Tokyo who is killed by the police and spends the length of the film floating around time and space, seeing how his life and death has affected those around him.
Walker stars as Tim Kearney, a three - time loser looking at a life behind bars who agrees to pose as recently - deceased drug dealer Bobby Z (Jason Lewis) for FBI agent Tad Gruzsa (Laurence Fishburne).
Chris Smith (an annoying Emile Hirsch), a working - class stiff and part - time drug dealer, and none too bright, decides to hire a contract killer (whose day job is being a police detective) to dispose of his mother, Adele, who, he thinks, has stolen from him (an act which has put him in trouble with some local gangsters).
This time we have Rainn Wilson's Frank, a sad - sack middle - aged loser who has just lost his ex-druggie wife (Liv Tyler) to drug dealer Jacques (a triumphant return from Kevin Bacon).
A latchkey kid with an overburdened single mom and an older brother in jail, Epps gets pursued by dangerous father - figure Anthony Mackie, a local drug dealer who feels guilty about her brother serving time for him.
Jung's rise up the ranks and his various indulgences in all a big - time drug dealer's life has to offer give Blow an inevitable resemblance to other dark dramas that touch on drug use; with its voiceover narration and the presence of Ray Liotta (who plays Jung's working class father Fred), GoodFellas is a clear influence on Demme and screenwriters David McKenna and Nick Cassavetes (adapting the book by Bruce Porter).
«At one end of the range of conduct caught by the mandatory minimum sentence provision stands a professional drug dealer who engages in the business of dangerous drugs for profit, who is in possession of a large amount of Schedule I substances, and who has been convicted many times for similar offences.
«Aversion to Death Penalty, but No Lack of Cases»: Today's edition of The New York Times contains an article that begins, «They are an ignominious bunch: two Bronx heroin dealers who murdered an informant, a father and son who killed three people in a drug deal, a Brooklyn gangster hired in the killing of a husband for the victim's wife.
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