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Review: 'War Dogs' tells a crazy story of young arms dealers

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Warner Bros. Pictures
This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Miles Teller (left) and Jonah Hill in a scene from, 'War Dogs.'
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This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Miles Teller in a scene from, 'War Dogs.' (Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)

“War Dogs” is too good of a true story not to get the Hollywood treatment, even if the end result doesn't do justice to the moral ambiguities and larger geopolitical implications of one of the craziest hustles in modern American history.

Essentially, in 2007, a couple of 20-something stoners from Miami Beach landed a nearly $300 million contract from the Department of Defense to supply ammunition to the Afghan military. Unbeknownst to the government, many of the supplies they were selling were over 40 years old, manufactured in China and basically unusable.

It's an insane story of the ambition, delusion and megalomania of a few young strivers who managed to find a lucrative place in the international arms game. The events have been chronicled in the press over the past eight years, including by journalist Guy Lawson, whose Rolling Stone article “The Stoner Arms Dealers” and book became the basis for the film.

Director and co-writer Todd Phillips, best known for chest-thumping comedies such as “The Hangover” trilogy, reaches beyond his comfort zone to tell this complicated tale. The film struggles to find the right tone as it juggles satire, bro fantasy and high-stakes thriller.

Miles Teller stars as David Packouz, a struggling massage therapist who takes up with Efraim Diveroli (Jonah Hill) in a moment of desperation. A much shadier figure but a childhood friend nonetheless, Efraim has the plan to game the government contracts system and make a few bucks from the war.

David just wants to provide for his beautiful partner Iz (Ana de Armas) and newborn daughter. The audience has to care about someone, after all, and it was never going to be Efraim, a schemer who fetishizes “Scarface,” money, women and guns, and who goes from general creep to all-out sociopath as the film progresses. Hill makes him sleazy to the core.

As with so many of these fast-rise-and-faster-fall stories, at first David and Efraim are having a “Hangover”-style blast — running from armed militia in Iraq to deliver Italian guns to an American outpost and doing cocaine in the clubs with South Beach babes all around.

Things get darker and more over the top when the guys take on the $300 million contract that eventually will be their downfall. This is where the film and Teller really come alive, focusing more on the practicalities and headaches of the illegal business of repackaging the Chinese munitions. Bradley Cooper has a small role as a mob-like, blacklisted arms dealer in this section.

“War Dogs” seems to want to be everything from “The Social Network” to “The Big Short,” but the script can't compete with the brains of those other films. Or maybe that's because the audience is getting the story straight from David, whose real-life version has a cameo in the film and is far too valorized to be believable.

Lindsey Bahr is an Associated Press film writer.