Stream Blow Online. Stream Blow Online.

Movie Title: Blow
Average customer review:

Blow is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download Blow

I initially had no interest in this film, thinking who wants to observe a movie about some two bit dope dealer? My teenage son, however, rented the DVD, and I found myself a captive audience. To my surprise, it was a riveting, well done film. Distinct, it was about a two bit dope dealer, but what a myth. George Jung, an all American kid from a hard working, hard knocks family, begins dealing marijuana during the 1960s. He develops his business into an empire, and then he decides to branch out into the sexier world of cocaine and really mountainous money. Using his remarkable entrepreneurial instinct, he makes a deal with the Columbian drug cartel. Before you know it, he is raking in millions. Unfortunately, the best laid plans often go awry, and there is no fairy myth ending for George. This is a fable of hopes, dreams, violence, greed, and betrayal.

Well directed by the slack Ted Demme, the film is compelling and gripping as it recounts George Jung’s fantastic odyssey in the drug trade, tracking the rise of the cocaine industry in the United States, attendant with all its violence. Johnny Depp, in the role of George Jung, makes him into a likable guy who has bitten off more than he can chew, with ultimately dire results. His is a search for the American Dream, a dream that forever remains elusive.

Ray Liotta is terrific in the role of George’s father, Fred Jung, a sensitive and devoted everyman married to a hard, selfish woman, Ermine Jung, a woman who lacks all motherly instincts and is played with gritty determination by Rachel Griffiths. Jordi Molla is salubrious in the role of Diego, George’s entre into the world of high stakes, cocaine dealing, and Cliff Curtis is grand as Escobar, the Columbian drug cartel’s main man. Penelope Cruz is dreadful as George’s dazzling Latina wife, Mirtha. She is simply a terrible actress whose English is often unintelligible. With the exception of Ms. Cruz, however, the cast is uniformly advantageous.

Buy,Download, Or Stream Blow! Click Here

This is the account about a young man who, faced with choices in his life, made the deplorable ones and lived to regret it. Johnny Depp captures the pathos of Jung’s wasted life. That his characterization is tiring, on is brought home by Ted Demme’s improbable interview of the steady George Jung. This interview is one of the numerous bonus features on this DVD and is well worth watching. It is a poignant interview, as it underscores that Jung’s was a life wasted. It also serves to illustrate honest how grand Depp’s characterization of Jung really is. All in all, this is a vibrant, informative, and inviting film.

This film presses all the just buttons, but being touted as basically the true-life memoir of George Jung, I was disappointed that the film paid slight respect to the chronology of vital events and completely overlooked many of the defining moments of George’s career.

Having already read the book “Blow” – available from Amazon and an advantageous biography – perhaps I found it more difficult to derive “into” the movie, often asking myself “why is this happening/not happening now? ” amongst other things…

A few determined changes for dramatic do, perhaps…..

Buy,Download, Or Stream Blow! Click Here

1. George’s first girlfriend (played by the babelicious Franka Potente) tell’s George she has an incurable disease, so he skips bail to hang out with her in Mexico until she dies. In valid fact, the girlfriend was dumped attractive mercurial, was never fatally-ill (interviewed for the book) and was one of a long, long succession of girls that George primitive and discarded during his “career”. He skipped to Mexico purely because he didn’t want to go to jail, and disappear into “quantity” smuggling of marijuana.

2. George is basically kidnapped and taken to Colombia to meet Pablo Escobar, – a test – and this meeting “starts” the whole coke business. In fact however, George had been importing/dealing astronomical quantities of coke for a few years before going to meet Pablo – something he did voluntarily on his maintain, to bag place among the Florida-based Columbians and score favour with Pablo in his problems with Carlos Lehder – a cartel member.

The movie ignores or trivialises many of George’s character traits – grand long-term coke usage and the resultant psychosis and paranoia, his life-long addiction to hookers, kinky sex, including masochistic tendencies played-out by cross-dressing (french maid) and being dominated and “spanked” by his wife while tied spread-eagled to their marital bed, among many others.

The turning point, the inaugurate of his “loyal” troubles is when George confides his secrets to an undercover cop whom he meets one afternoon on the beach out-front of his house. In short-order, George invites the guy into his house, tells the cop that he’s a big-time smuggler and immediately makes him piece of the “operation” without brilliant anything about the guy. This of course brings astronomical heat onto George, and the good-guys initiate engineering George’s downfall.

The movie omits this entire pivotal event however, perhaps because the real-life event, that for a apt big-time dealer with $30m stashed in the house,at least, displayed a degree of stupidity and naievety that would get Johnny Depp’s George (colorful, hip, trusting) peer dumb and honest too fabulous to be sympathetic.

Nor is there any honest basis for the whole father/daughter interplay in the movie, which I personally assume is overdone, and is shapely out-of-character anyway.

Finally (at least for this review) the money George had stashed away in Panama, approx. $50m apparently, was not confiscated by the Panamanian Govt (Noriega) – George never visited Panama – but was stolen by the pilots who opened the bank chronicle for George, (co-signatories) and flew the cash down on a regular basis over several years. It defies understanding that over several years, George never notion to enquire about the balance of his memoir, and honest kept shuttling the cash into the narrative, but that’s what actually happened.

Carlos Lehder was arrested in Colombia – basically fingered by Escobar for bringing the heat down on the cartel because of his loopy political beliefs, extradited to the States, with George being the main prosecution view. This gained George early release, and it was actually another bust in the mid-80’s that reulted in George’s exhibit incarceration. Again, none of this was in the movie, although I judge it would have brought another perspective to George’s characterisation, and also given George some revenge for his beating by Carlos’ thugs on Norman Cay (never happened) had it been included.

I guess all these and many more lawful inaccuracies in combination with Johnny Depp’s overly sympathetic portrayal of George – almost a victim of circumstance – and definitely too “nice” to be in the drug business, are so far off the real-deal that it made it very difficult for me to give this movie the respect that so many others assume it deserves….

All this doesn’t close the movie being reliable entertainment but I can’t succor thinking how kindly it “could” have been, had it been a itsy-bitsy more legal to George’s loyal account.

The cast is generally outstanding, the discover and sound of the DVD transfer never less than scrumptious, and the soundtrack really brought relieve the 70s / early 80s for me – a time of poor fashion, worse haircuts, and for most of us, a time probably best forgotten.

Buy the DVD. The book “blow” is definitely worth reading, and if you’re aloof eager in the whole coke thing, believe checking out the book titled “Killing Pablo” a proper perceive at the the coke business, the Medelin cartel, and the hunt-for and eventual killing of Pablo Escobar. Now “there’s” a movie unbiased begging to be made……
Best Stretch Mark Cream
Acnezine

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Bumpzee
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Furl
  • Mixx
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!