Everything about Traffik totally explained
Traffik is a
1989 television serial about
illegal drug trade. Its three stories are interwoven, with
arcs told from the perspectives of
Pakistani growers and manufacturers,
German dealers, and
British users.
Background
The six-part series was produced by Britain's
Channel 4, written by
Simon Moore, and directed by
Alastair Reid. In the United States it was first aired on
Masterpiece Theatre in
1990.
The film starred:
- Bill Paterson as Jack Lithgow, the father of a heroin addict whose job is Home Office minister in the UK government with responsibilities for combating drug use and importation.
- Julia Ormond as his addicted daughter, in her national television debut
- Lindsay Duncan as the wife of a German drug smuggler, Karl Rosshalde (played by George Kukura), whose life is changed forever after her husband's arrest
- Fritz Müller-Scherz and Tilo Prückner as the German detectives aiming to bring down Rosshalde with the help of informer Jacques Ledesert (Peter Lakenmacher)
- Jamal Shah as naive opium poppy grower Fazal, who is evicted from his land thanks to the policies encouraged by Lithgow's government, and as a result seeks a new job (and inevitable corruption) in Karachi
- Talat Hussain as Pakistani drug lord Tariq Butt, the supplier of Rosshalde's European heroin network, who hires the former poppy grower
Reviews
"Traffik" is lauded not only for the quality of its script, its complex, interleaving plots, the brilliant performances of its ensemble cast, and its subtle pacing, but also its bold and dispassionate look at the global drugs trade. It doesn't demonise or oversentimentalise the victims of heroin - the poor growers of "harmless" opium, the
mules, or the addicts. It manages to humanise the "evil-doers" - the gangsters and pushers - in a way which makes the heroin problem seem part of the fabric of society, not some extra-societal force of people committed to "evil". Traditional political solutions to heroin trafficking and use are shown in all their ineffectualness. The overall message of the series is that the production and supply of drugs like heroin can't be stopped, and that innocent people get hurt by the drug trade.
All these qualities were recognised when
Traffik was nominated for six
BAFTA Awards, winning three. It also won an
International Emmy Award for best drama.
The plot of
Traffik was used as a basis for the
2000 film Traffic.
The film is available on DVD and VHS.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Traffik'.
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