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Silk Road
It was the arrest that changed how people looked at the internet. On Oct. 1, 2013, 29-year-old Austin native Ross Ulbricht was arrested by the FBI in the Glen Park branch of the San Francisco Library for the contents of his laptop. What was on there was the key to a massive criminal endeavor known as the Silk Road: a secretive black market for drugs, guns, whatever, paid for with Bitcoin and shipped using the regular postal service. Ulbricht was the mastermind, operating under the screen name Dread Pirate Roberts.
It was immediately a hot story (hit men? Cybercrime? Smuggling?
David Lewis February 18, 2021Updated: February 19, 2021, 11:30 am
In “Silk Road,” Ross Ulbricht (Nick Robinson) is the target of an undercover operation when he creates a site on the dark web that sells illicit drugs and weapons. Photo: Lionsgate
“Silk Road,” a cat-and-mouse tale involving a DEA agent and an internet outlaw, is never a dull affair, but the ambitious film doesn’t quite click: It’s got too many subplots and too few moments of suspense.
Director-writer Tiller Russell, who recently helmed “Night Stalker: The Hunt for a Serial Killer,” can’t equal the tension of that eerie, stylish documentary. In “Silk Road,” Russell attempts to create something that’s a cross between “The Social Network,” a tale of internet ambitions run amok, and “Heat,” a thriller that delves intimately into the lives of both the cops and the robbers.
Silk Road
It was the arrest that changed how people looked at the internet. On Oct. 1, 2013, 29-year-old Austin native Ross Ulbricht was arrested by the FBI in the Glen Park branch of the San Francisco Library for the contents of his laptop. What was on there was the key to a massive criminal endeavor known as the Silk Road: a secretive black market for drugs, guns, whatever, paid for with Bitcoin and shipped using the regular postal service. Ulbricht was the mastermind, operating under the screen name Dread Pirate Roberts.
It was immediately a hot story (hit men? Cybercrime? Smuggling?
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