• last year
A former U.S. soldier returns to his hometown to find it overrun by crime and corruption, which prompts him to clean hou | dG1fc0doWjVTMGhtc2c
Transcript
00:00 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:03 [SIREN]
00:06 [SIREN]
00:09 [SIREN]
00:12 [SIREN]
00:15 Hey, Chris.
00:40 License and registration, please.
00:41 You're joking, right?
00:47 License and registration.
00:48 Huh.
00:49 What's the problem, Sheriff?
01:02 You and the drugs you're peddling out of your casino.
01:05 Huh.
01:06 Only thing that's going on at my casino right now
01:08 is construction.
01:08 You took care of that.
01:10 Yeah, that's right.
01:11 I plan on taking care of everything else, too.
01:13 If you can, try to think this through.
01:15 A casino is a license to print money.
01:18 Why would I jeopardize that by selling drugs?
01:20 Because you own the town, Jay.
01:22 That's changed now.
01:23 Really?
01:24 See, the only thing that I think has changed around here
01:26 is that you get to wake up every morning
01:28 and put on that nifty little badge.
01:30 But underneath that badge is the same guy
01:32 who couldn't make it playing college football
01:34 and apparently couldn't make it in the army
01:35 and not really going to ever make it as a cop.
01:39 Is that right?
01:40 Yeah.
01:41 And if you push too hard, you're going to be
01:43 a man who never gets a C40.
01:44 License, please.
01:49 Thanks, Sheriff.
01:58 Sir, get your taillights fixed.
02:03 It's your last morning.
02:05 What's wrong with my taillights?
02:06 [GUNSHOTS]
02:09 They're broken.
02:10 They're broken.
02:13 [TIRES SCREECHING]
02:16 [AUDIO OUT]
02:19 [AUDIO OUT]
02:23 [AUDIO OUT]
02:26 [AUDIO OUT]
02:30 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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