
The difference between drugs and corporate swindles, obviously, is that with drugs the profits are real. This plot describes countless lives, and is so common because the laws against drugs do such a good job of supporting the price and making the business so lucrative. The trajectory is well-known: poverty, success, riches, and then death or jail.
PAID IN FULL MOVIE
The parallels to Brian De Palma's " Scarface" are underlined by scenes from that movie which are watched by the characters in this one. The movie is ambitious, has good energy and is well-acted, but tells a familiar story in a familiar way. Then another young hotshot (Cam'ron) comes along, and Ace becomes the veteran who's a target. he prospers, learning from the more experienced Lulu ( Esai Morales). When another dealer ( Kevin Carroll) goes off to the pen, Ace moves quickly to grab his territory, and soon has so much money that his life demonstrates one of the drawbacks of growing up in poverty: You lack the skills to spend it fast enough. He tells his story himself, in a narration like the ones in " GoodFellas" or " Casino," and in an early scene we see money that has become so meaningless that small fortunes are bet on tossing crumpled paper at wastebaskets. Moving on the streets all day, it is impossible for him to miss seeing the good fortune of drug dealers, and he learns of the fortunes to be made by delivering something other than pressed pants. is played by Wood Harris, is a deliveryman man for a dry cleaner named Pip ( Chi McBride). Hot stars Mekhi Phifer (8 MILE, SHAFT, TVs ER) and Wood Harris (REMEMBER THE TITANS) team up in an edgy, hard-hitting film with a slammin.
PAID IN FULL CRACK
and Rich Porter) during that era of expanding crack addiction.

"Paid in Full" takes place in the 1980s and is based on the true stories of famous drug lords (Alpo, A.Z. I guess in a way that's what "Traffic" did. "Paid in Full" might have been fascinating if it had intercut between Ace's career and the adventures of an Enron executive of about the same age. Three strikes and you're out, while three lucrative bankruptcies and you're barely up and running.

Because many drug dealers and consumers are poor and powerless, laws come down on them more ferociously than on the white-collar criminals whose misdeeds are on a larger scale.
