Pubdate: Sun, 25 Mar 2001 Source: Newsday (NY) Copyright: 2001 Newsday Inc. Contact: 235 Pinelawn Rd., Melville NY 11747 Fax: (516)843-2986 Website: http://www.newsday.com/homepage.htm Forum: http://www.newsday.com/forums/forums.htm Author: Ellis Henican Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/traffic.htm (Traffic) THE TRUE TRIUMPH OF 'TRAFFIC' The last time we had anything like this from Hollywood was Christmastime, 1995. The film was "Dead Man Walking." The stars were Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn. He played an inmate on death row at the Louisiana State Penitentiary. She played a Catholic nun. It wasn't obvious at the time, but that movie and those actors achieved something quite extraordinary. They took an abstract social issue, capital punishment, and turned it into a topic that was impossible to ignore. "Dead Man Walking" accomplished this the only possible way: By telling a human story that was intimate, particular and unflinching. You could not see "Dead Man Walking" and ever again think of capital punishment the same way. That one movie, more than any other single factor, helped to pry open a genuine national debate, a debate that thrust the question of life and death back into the center of the political dialogue, precisely where it belongs. The movie didn't settle the question, of course, but it made the discussion impossible to silence. Yes, the movies still can move people in ways that a thousand op-ed pieces cannot. And this wasn't the first time. "On the Waterfront" ignited a national uproar over mobbed-up labor unions in 1952. "Dr. Strangelove" focused America on the threat of nuclear war in 1964. A few other movies over the years-but sadly, only a few-have come down off the screen in a similar way, reel life altering real life. Which brings us, finally, to "Traffic" and tonight's big awards show. "Traffic" has been nominated for five Academy Awards including best picture, best director (Steven Soderbergh) and best adapted screenplay. The movie has already grossed more than $100 million. But more important than all of that, it has sparked a national conversation of what very well may be the biggest social problem we face today: our failed and costly attempts to deal with the issue of drugs. Better than any movie ever has, "Traffic" portrays the waste-both human and financial-and the utter futility of America's 30-year "war on drugs." The movie achieves that the way that "Dead Man Walking," "On the Waterfront" and "Dr. Strangelove" all did: by turning the general into the particular-and by putting Benicio Del Toro into a featured role, thereby capturing the hearts of every woman I know. And not a minute too soon. We are indeed at a crucial moment in the drug-policy debate. In New York, state legislators are finally doing something about the harsh Rockefeller drug laws. Even the Republican governor, George Pataki, has a plan for easing the mandatory penalties for nonviolent drug convicts. And it's not just New York. Five hundred thousand Americans are now behind bars. Billions and billions of dollars are spent every year. And illegal drugs are cheaper, purer and easier to get than they ever have been before. But the new president, George W. Bush, still has not appointed his own drug czar. Early comments from the White House are not encouraging. The drug rhetoric so far is just an echo of the discredited "just get tough" approach. We already know what works. Treatment, not imprisonment. Education, not criminalization. Truth, not scare tactics. And there are some fresh signs of sanity out there. Just this week, the new president of Mexico came out for drug legalization. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that doctors in South Carolina have no business playing narcs in the maternity ward. The state of New Mexico, whose governor has admitted that he is a former drug user, just passed three common-sense drug laws. They will mean more dollars for treatment, clean needles for addicts and a promising new medication that can prevent heroin overdoses. Albany should be looking west to Santa Fe. I don't know whether "Traffic" will win best picture or any of the other awards it is up for tonight. I hope it wins a few, because that will generate a whole lot more attention to an issue we cannot afford to ignore. In "Traffic," a national drug czar, played by Michael Douglas, fights desperately to save his own daughter from the ravages of drug abuse. In the process, he discovers the futility of his country's war on drugs. The corruption. The hopelessness. And the refusal to face a central painful truth:Until we rethink these tired old policies, we will continue making a bad situation worse. We and our children will pay. Any movie that can challenge that old thinking is an award winner to me. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek