Cocaine Cowboys 2
Cocaine Cowboys 2 | |
---|---|
Directed by | Billy Corben and Lisa M. Perry |
Produced by | Alfred Spellman Billy Corben David Cypkin |
Edited by | Billy Corben David Cypkin |
Release date |
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Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Cocaine Cowboys 2 – formally titled Cocaine Cowboys II: Hustlin' With the Godmother – is a 2008 documentary film sequel to Cocaine Cowboys (2006). Directed by Billy Corben and Lisa M. Perry and produced by Rakontur, the film "stars" Charles Cosby, Nelson Andreu, and Jorge "Rivi" Ayala and features the Colombian-born "Cocaine Godmother", drug lord Griselda Blanco.
Set in 1991, the film is largely narrated by Cosby, a small-time cocaine dealer from a broken home located in Oakland's inner-city. As described in the film summary published in The New York Times, the film "follows Charles Cosby, a small time coke dealer in Oakland, California whose life is changed forever when he writes a fan letter to the "Cocaine Godmother" Griselda Blanco, who is serving time at a nearby federal prison. Six months later, Cosby is a multi-millionaire, Blanco's lover, and the head of her $40 million a year cocaine business."[1] Although Blanco was imprisoned by the time Cosby met her, through Cosby and other intermediates, she was still able to organise a multi-million dollar cocaine empire, importing cocaine into California and distributing it to various locations across the United States.
The relationship between Blanco and Cosby eventually came to an end when Jorge Rivi Ayala, Blanco's former hitman and enforcer, agreed to testify against her on the subject of several murders she had ordered. Cosby alleges that Blanco, facing a possible death sentence, attempted to organise the kidnapping of John F. Kennedy Jr., aiming to use him as a hostage to secure her release. Cosby claims to have balked at the prospect of engaging in such a serious crime with a lengthy sentence, and claims he deliberately discussed the planned kidnapping on the phone with Blanco, knowing the call was likely being monitored and hence the mention of the kidnapping would be passed on to the FBI, preventing the kidnapping from taking place. Cosby himself was later subpoena'd to testify against Blanco and did so, but the case against her collapsed when Rivi was implicated in a phone sex scandal with secretaries in the Florida State Attorney's office. Blanco was deported from the United States after her sentence was complete.
The documentary also explores Blanco's criminal past, including her rise to prominence in the Miami drug trade, before her involvement in escalating criminal conflict in Miamia, her relocation to California and eventual imprisonment.
Acting credits
- Charles Cosby – Himself
- Donovan Kennedy – Himself
- Will Collins – Himself
- Jorge "Rivi" Ayala – Himself
- Al Singleton – Himself
- Bob Palombo – Himself
- Nelson Andreu – Himself
- Raul Diaz – Himself
- Luis Casuso – Himself
- Samuel I. Burstyn – Himself
Production credits
- Director – Billy Corben
- Director – Lisa M. Perry
- Executive Producer – Jason Janego
- Executive Producer – Tom Quinn
- Producer – Lisa M. Perry
- Producer – Billy Corben
- Producer – David Cypkin
- Producer – Alfred Spellman
- Associate Producer – Evan Rosenfeld
- Cinematographer – Jorge Valdes-Iga
- Editor – David Cypkin
- Editor – Billy Corben
- Rerecording Mixer – Paul Michael
- Animator – David Cypkin
References
- ^ Baseline StudioSystems (2008). "Cocaine Cowboys II: Hustlin' With the Godmother (2008)". The New York Times. Retrieved May 6, 2012.
External links
- 2008 films
- American films
- Cocaine in the United States
- Documentary films about organized crime in the United States
- Documentary films about the illegal drug trade
- Works about Colombian drug cartels
- English-language films
- Crime in Florida
- 2000s documentary films
- Crime in California
- History of Oakland, California
- History of Miami, Florida