Not exact matches
Director Brad Furman's «The Infiltrator,» starring Bryan Cranston as
undercover U.S. Customs
agent Robert Mazur, who infiltrated major drug cartels — including Pablo Escobar's — in the 1980s, will hit theaters August 31, 2016.
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).
Fledgling indie distributor Broad Green Pictures, which has staffed up to around 60, has acquired U.S. distribution rights at the Cannes market for «The Infiltrator,» starring Bryan Cranston («Breaking Bad») as
undercover U.S. Customs
agent Robert Mazur, who used mob ties to make his way into some of the world's largest drug cartels during the 1980s.
The movie, adapted from
Robert Mazur's book about his time as an
undercover agent for the United States Customs Service, follows «Operation «C» Chase,» a sting operation during the mid-to-late 1980s that redirected the War on Drugs toward the oldest investigative trick in the book: Follow the money.
In Brad Furman's The Infiltrator, the Breaking Bad actor plays U.S. Customs Service special
agent Robert Mazur who, as is par for the course in certain genres, decides to take on one last job to go
undercover as «Bob Musella.»
Customs
agent Robert Mazur (Bryan Cranston) has already had a storied career of putting away the bad guys via his stellar
undercover work.
Bryan Cranston is The Infiltrator in this trailer for the film about
Robert Mazur, the real - life DEA
agent whose
undercover work led him to the top of the Colombian cartels» money - laundering organization.
Enter «The Infiltrator,» starring Bryan Cranston as real - life DEA
agent Robert Mazur, who used his
undercover alias «Bob Musella» to infiltrate Pablo Escobar's powerful underworld empire and crack his money - laundering scheme.
Once again we enter the conflicted world of a good guy,
undercover narcotics
agent Robert Mazur (Bryan Cranston), who begins to have a crisis of conscience about the charming bad guys he's expected to bust in the 1980s.
The Infiltrator is adapted from the memoir by
Robert Mazur, a federal
agent who went
undercover among Colombian druglords associated with Pablo Escobar and helped bring down his crooked banking infrastructure; the screenwriter who adapted Mazur's book is the director's mother: Ellen Brown Furman.
Sent to the agency's Berlin office
undercover, Daniel finds himself in complicated company, including station head (Richard Jenkins), who is not quite ready to admit he's done with his job; administrator Valerie Edwards (Michelle Forbes, forbes - midable), who is ready to take his place; deputy chief
Robert Kirsch (Leland Orser), whose constant abrasiveness would ordinarily mean he'll turn out all right in the end; and
agent Hector DeJean (Rhys Ifans), an old associate of Daniel's who seems to be going to pieces.
Nate Foster (Daniel Radcliffe), a young idealistic FBI
agent, goes
undercover like Bryan Cranston's
Robert Mazur of «The Infiltrator,» also based on a real hero — and like Michael German himself.
78 - year - old
Robert Gentile, the mobster who police suspect spearheaded the $ 500 million Isabella Stewart Gardner museum theft in 1990, was arrested for selling a firearm to an
undercover agent.