Funny, thrilling, and disturbingly relevant.
Barry quickly realizes he can make far more money using his CIA access to smuggle cocaine for Pablo Escobar’s Medellín Cartel. The CIA, the DEA, and the White House all know what he’s doing—but each turns a blind eye because Barry is also helping fund the Contras (U.S.-backed rebels in Nicaragua) and gathering intelligence. American Made -2017-
By the mid-1980s, Barry is flying planeloads of cash, running a private airfield in rural Arkansas, and laundering money through a local bank. He even helps train the Contras at a secret base. But as his operation grows, enemies close in: the cartel, the DEA, state police, and eventually the U.S. government. The film races toward his infamous downfall. | Actor | Role | Description | |-------|------|-------------| | Tom Cruise | Barry Seal | Charming, resourceful, and increasingly reckless pilot-turned-smuggler. Cruise plays him with manic energy and a wide grin. | | Domhnall Gleeson | Monty 'Schafer' | A slick, morally ambiguous CIA handler who enables Barry’s illegal activities as long as it serves U.S. interests. | | Sarah Wright | Lucy Seal | Barry’s loyal but frustrated wife, who slowly discovers the truth about his "flying jobs." | | Jesse Plemons | Sheriff Joe Downing | A local Arkansas lawman who becomes suspicious of Barry’s sudden wealth. | | Caleb Landry Jones | JB | Barry’s hapless, junkie brother-in-law who gets drawn into the smuggling. | 4. Historical Accuracy: What’s Real vs. Hollywood The film takes major liberties but captures the absurdity of the real Iran-Contra–cocaine nexus. Funny, thrilling, and disturbingly relevant