Traffic | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Steven Soderbergh |
Produced by |
Edward Zwick Marshall Herskovitz Laura Bickford |
Screenplay by | Stephen Gaghan |
Based on |
Traffik by Simon Moore |
Starring |
Steven Bauer Benjamin Bratt James Brolin Don Cheadle Erika Christensen Clifton Collins Jr. Benicio del Toro Michael Douglas Miguel Ferrer Albert Finney Topher Grace Luis Guzmán Amy Irving Tomas Milian D. W. Moffett Dennis Quaid Peter Riegert Jacob Vargas Catherine Zeta-Jones |
Music by | Cliff Martinez |
Cinematography | Peter Andrews |
Edited by | Stephen Mirrione |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | USA Films |
Release date
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Running time
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147 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language |
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Budget | $48 million |
Box office | $207.5 million |
Traffic is a 2000 American crime drama film directed by Steven Soderbergh and written by Stephen Gaghan. It explores the illegal drug trade from a number of perspectives: users, enforcers, politicians, and traffickers. Their stories are edited together throughout the film, although some of the characters do not meet each other. The film is an adaptation of the 1989 British Channel 4 television series Traffik.
20th Century Fox, the original financiers of the film, demanded that Harrison Ford play a leading role and that significant changes to the screenplay be made. Soderbergh refused and proposed the script to other major Hollywood studios, but it was rejected because of the three-hour running time and the subject matter—Traffic is more of a political film than most Hollywood productions.USA Films, however, liked the project from the start and offered the filmmakers more money than Fox. Soderbergh operated the camera himself and adopted a distinctive cinematography tint for each story so that audiences could tell them apart.
Traffic was critically acclaimed and earned numerous awards, including four Oscars: Best Director for Steven Soderbergh, Best Supporting Actor for Benicio del Toro, Best Adapted Screenplay for Stephen Gaghan and Best Film Editing for Stephen Mirrione. It was also a commercial success with a worldwide box-office revenue total of $207.5 million, well above its estimated $46 million budget.