![]() ![]() On returning home, some of the group's issues are mended whilst some are thrown into sharper relief. They recover Lee from a group of younger partygoers he has spent the night with and make their way home. Later, as expected by the group, "what goes up must come down" sets in as the effects of their drug use begin to hit home leaving them coping with feelings of anxiety and paranoia. The ensemble then joins a house party, where Lulu and Jip finally kiss and attempt unsuccessfully to make love whereas the established couple, Koop and Nina, fight over Koop's perceptions about her behaviour. The club scene is then examined through a series of cameos including two attempts by older journalists to understand the club scene. Jip gives up his ticket to Lulu, whom he has talked into coming out and is forced to talk his way into the club as the group are a ticket short. They go to pubs and clubs on Friday, taking along Nina's 17-year-old brother Lee whose waning enthusiasm for his first drugs experience is played out in a debate between Jip and a doctor. ![]() The film follows the antics of the five friends as well as various characters they meet along the way. The five friends become very close, take drugs such as cannabis, ecstasy and cocaine, and "live for the weekend". Moff, the newest member of the group having met Jip at a warehouse party after moving from London to Cardiff, is an unemployed slacker who works as a small-time dealer, despite his father being a senior policeman. Lulu, Jip's best female friend and "dropping partner", has suffered infidelity in her last 3 relationships. Nina is being sexually harassed in a job she had no choice but to take after having failed a college interview. ![]() Koop, Jip's best friend, is jealous of his girlfriend Nina's happy and care-free nature. Jip is suffering from sexual anxiety brought on by a series of unsuccessful liaisons. The film is an ensemble piece in which the five protagonists plan, enjoy and come down from a weekend out in Cardiff all motivated at least in part by the need for a weekend escape from the banality and misery of their daily lives. Dyer, Parkes and Reynolds are due to reprise their roles. A sequel, known as Human Traffic 2: Revolution was announced in April 2019 and is due for release at an unknown date. Human Traffic has achieved cult status, especially amongst subcultures such as the rave culture. With an original budget of £340,000, the production eventually came in for £2,200,000 the film was a financial success, taking in £2,500,000 at the UK box office alone, also enjoying good VHS and DVD sales. It is also the film debut of Danny Dyer as well as referencing another drug culture film of the era, Trainspotting. The film is narrated by one of the stars, John Simm, featuring numerous cameo appearances. In the first 25 minutes of the film Lee, the 17-year-old brother of central character Nina, enthuses "I am about to be part of the chemical generation" and lists, using the slang of the period, a series of drugs that he might use later that night. A central feature is the avoidance of moralising about the impact of 1990s dance lifestyle instead the film concentrates on recreating the "vibe, the venues and the mood" of the dance movement from the 1988–89 " Second Summer of Love" to the film's release in 1999. The plot of the film revolves around five twenty-something friends and their wider work and social circle, the latter devotees of the club scene, taking place over the course of a drug-fuelled weekend in Cardiff, Wales. It includes scenes provoking social commentary and the use of archive footage to provide political commentary. The film explores themes of coming of age, drug and night club cultures, as well as relationships. ![]() It is a cult film of the Cool Cymru era of arts in Wales. Human Traffic is a 1999 British-Irish independent coming of age comedy drama film written and directed by Justin Kerrigan. ![]()
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