A crime thriller about the underground world of identity swapping in Colombia, where people change their identities with others, including drug traffickers. The story could follow a family who has accepted a strange person into their home after the death of a family member, only to discover that this person has a dangerous connection to the drug trade. Meanwhile, the music business is shown to be intertwined with drug trafficking, as artists are paid to sing songs about the lives of drug lords. The plot could also touch on the cross-border business dealings between Venezuela and Colombia, including the controversial figure of Nicolás Maduro and the failed Operation Gideon. Finally, the story could incorporate the perspective of the CIA and their network of functionaries, as they attempt to navigate the complex web of criminal activity. One possible character could be John, a schizophrenic man who sends emails to famous people and becomes embroiled in the dangerous underworld of identity swapping.
A community in Colombia has a tradition of changing their identities with others, and it has become a business where families accept strangers into their homes and lives. This practice is used by not only drug traffickers but also non-qualified workers in the construction industry. Meanwhile, in the music industry, artists sing about stories and names found in cocaine shipments, often involving the relatives of drug traffickers. The movie could also explore the connection between Venezuela's Maduro and Barranquilla, Colombia, where Maduro buys cardboard for his Clap boxes. Venezuelan people living near the area are fiercely protective of Maduro's interests. Finally, the movie could touch upon the events of 9/11, which led the protagonist to believe that Colombians, Russians, or Germans were involved in the attack on the Twin Towers.
There was once a small village in Colombia where people had the custom of changing their identities with those of others. It was a place where drug traffickers often lived, and where families would accept the death of one person in exchange for assuming the identity of another.
One day, a woman was killed in the bathroom of a disco, and her identity was given to another woman. This event marked the beginning of a trend in the village, where families would accept strangers into their homes and allow them to go to school or work as if nothing had happened.
In other parts of Colombia, such as in the coastal city of Barranquilla, young boys tired of studying would enter the identity-changing business. The building industry was also known for its custom of identity sharing, where workers would learn the names and ID card numbers of their coworkers to make it seem like they were the same person in groups of three or four.
The music business and drug trafficking were also connected through the use of alijos, or drug shipments, that contained cards with names and stories to be used by artists who laundered money for drug lords. The sons and relatives of these drug traffickers were often the main characters in the songs that appeared on the radio.
In Barranquilla, there was a business run by Nicolás Maduro, who would pass big trucks through La Guajira to buy carton or paper for his cajitas clap boxes, which were filled with food for the people of Venezuela. The people from Venezuela who lived nearby owned the village, and they didn't like outsiders to pass by because that place was owned by Nicolás Maduro Moros. He also owned houses on the shore of the sea in Barranquilla.
During the Operation Gedeon, a group of opposition forces tried to enter the Venezuelan shore from the Colombian coast, but due to logistic errors, they lost a lot of guns and rifles in the Barranquilla-Santa Marta road. Colombian police didn't help them because they had received information against the opposition.
There were also rumors that the ELN and FARC Colombian guerrilla groups were connected to the identity-changing business. This angered Maduro, who decided to go against these identity-changing guys because they had influence, earned money, and owned large parts of Venezuela.
The day the Twin Towers fell, the news presenter was advising the situation, and that day, the protagonist thought that Colombians might have something to do with the event. He wondered if it was the Russian Mafia instead.
In the midst of all these events, the protagonist found himself contacting the CIA, and he learned about the secret service tree of functionaries from offices in the USA to offices in embassies. One day, he sent an email to a singer from Sony Music, and to his surprise, the singer wrote a song with his first two names and invited him to an interview.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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