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Traffic is a 2000 American crime drama film directed by Steven Soderbergh and written by Stephen Gaghan. It explores the illegal drug trade from several perspectives: users, enforcers, politicians, and traffickers. Their stories are edited together throughout the film, although some characters do not meet each other.
The miniseries currently has an average rating of 83% on Rotten Tomatoes. [3] Writer Suan C. Boyd acknowledges the miniseries for giving different perspectives of the global war on drug trade, going as far as to claim that Traffik is the only film sample that includes the poppy grower in depth.
Trafic (Traffic) is a 1971 Italian-French comedy film directed by Jacques Tati. Trafic was the last film to feature Tati's famous character of Monsieur Hulot, and followed the vein of earlier Tati films that lampooned modern society.
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 27% based on 33 reviews, and an average rating of 3.9/10. The website's critical consensus reads, " Traffik highlights Paula Patton's impressive dramatic chops — and smothers them in a thoroughly underwhelming exploitation thriller."
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Trafic (Traffic), a 1971 Italian-French comedy film; Traffic, an American crime drama film Traffik, a 1989 British TV miniseries on which the 2000 film was based; Traffic, a 2004 American TV miniseries based on the 2000 film; Trafic, a Romanian short film; Traffic, a Malayalam-language film
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A plot summary is not a recap. It should not cover every scene or every moment of a story. A summary is not meant to reproduce the experience of reading or watching the work. In fact, readers might be here because they didn't understand the original. Just repeating what they have already seen or read is unlikely to help them.