I want to digress a bit to talk about Jeff Goldbum. Jeff Goldblum in Deep Cover gives a performance that is indicative of all that makes Jeff Goldblum a favorite among so many. His patented rapid fire cool, constant state of faux confusion, and ability to make almost any scene seem completely improv, color and empower his character to rare heights even for Goldblum. In this role, surprise and unpredictability are built into the character even without Goldblum, so that Goldblum's inhabitation of the character is a perfect marriage. No one knows who David Jason is, including David Jason. Is he a lawyer, a drug dealer, a house husband, a killer? So we get to watch Goldblum as David, mold David into who it is he wants to be through Goldblum's sly and intelligent reading of the character and his trademark histrionics. What we learn along the way, is that in a way David is a mirror image of Russell. Both David and Russell begin the film on a journey of self discovery, but where they end up, and the particulars around how they arrive there are entirely different . David Jason's biggest weapon against those that undermine him is that they never see him coming. To the point Felix Barabosa (Gregory Sierra) the cartel boss for whom Jason supplies - believes that he can cruelly bully, pester, and belittle David for years and nothing would happen. There is a wonderfully complex understanding of the intersection of privilege to dissect here, where Balboa possesses a specific structural privilege through the nature of his rank and authority in the Cartel over David, but David (who himself is used to being a victim of racism as well) possesses a more macro structural privilege himself through the inclusion of his ethnicity as white. . I don't find it hard to believe that this is a contributing factor to why David chafes working under Balboa. Reinvigorated by the appearance and attitude of Laurence Fishburne’s Johnny Hull (His cover) and propelled by his own inflated but bruised ego , David Jason morphs into the kind of men he has always incorrectly seen himself as better than, and quite possibly the man he always wanted to be. This newfound menace is conveyed with incredible skill. By the film’s end the transformation is complete, Goldblum is a werewolf, his fangs fully bared, his predatorial nature on full display no longer in hiding. Physically everything from his hair to his walk, and body language has morphed into a man who is now confidently himself, or at least the man he envisioned himself to be. And it's both jolting, and surprising to see Goldblum turn his almost magical charm and likability against and on us. David Jason is the embodiment of the hypocrisy of moral high ground, and absolutes in a capitalist society. Greed is good, and white is good, and everything else is a tool or a waste. There is no limit, and as soon as David gets a taste of this (as suggested by Barbosa) in his first kill, he is possessed by his own avarice and bloodlust. In a way David Jason is a white version of Tupac Shakur's "Bishop" from Ernest Dickerson’s "Juice". Hopped up on violence as an extension of his power, derived from his sense of powerlessness as an undervalued member of a criminal enterprise, and a undervalued minority in America. Goldblum from start to finish sculpts the mannerisms, and attitude, of a covertly racist, white male on a destructive journey of revenge and megalomania.