American Made True Story: 10 Biggest Changes To Barry Seal’s Real Life

American Made True Story: 10 Biggest Changes To Barry Seal’s Real Life

The 2017 film American Made, starring Tom Cruise as Barry Seal, captivated audiences with its stranger-than-fiction drama action about a drug runner for the CIA in an operation known as the Iran-Contra Affair in the 1980s. The movie featured a chapter of America’s dark history and involvement in the drug smuggling of cocaine into the US soil, and the movie depicts the true story with action, intrigue, and sometimes dark comedy. However, as in the case of many Hollywood movies, American Made took significant liberties for storytelling and entertainment.

Tom Cruise took on a drastically different role as Barry Seal, highlighting the worlds of aviation, adrenaline addiction, drug smuggling, and government espionage. However, the line between reality and fiction is blurred in this cinematic account. While American Made offered an attention-grabbing narrative, several elements and names were altered or entirely fictionalized for dramatic impact. The film’s director, Doug Liman, described the movie as “a fun lie based on a true story,” according toTIME, signaling that the movie wasn’t intended as a documentary about the notorious informant.

10 American Made Changes Barry Seal’s Wife’s Name

American Made True Story: 10 Biggest Changes To Barry Seal’s Real Life

Tom Cruise’s character, Barry Seal, is married to a woman named Lucy, portrayed by Sarah Wright. However, Barry Seal’s real-life wife was named Deborah Seal. Wright plays Seal’s foul-mouthed and supportive wife, who enjoyed throughout the film all the extravaganza and rich lifestyle her husband’s activities brought to their lives. However, Seal married three times and had five children: a son and a daughter from his first wife, Barbara Bottoms, and three children with his third wife, Deborah Ann DuBois.

9 Monty Schafer Wasn’t A Real-Life CIA Agent

Domhall Gleeson holding a map in his hand in American Made

Irish actor Domhnall Gleeson impressively played Monty Schafer, a CIA handler who recruits Barry Seal in a bar. Monty Schafer never existed in Seal’s real life. He’s a composite character, created to streamline the story and embody various government connections that Seal may have had. Created to represent Barry Seal’s questionable connection with the CIA, Monty Schafer serves as the patriot handler who would go to extreme lengths and morally blurry lines to serve his country.

8 The Real Barry Seal Denied Having Worked For The CIA

Tom_Cruise_on_the_phone_in_American_Made

Barry Seal consistently denied having worked directly for the CIA. While there are continuous conspiracy theories about his involvement with intelligence agencies, Seal himself has never confirmed these claims. The movie, however, paints a much more explicit connection between Seal and the CIA. In Del Hahn’s book about Barry Seal’s life, Smuggler’s End: The Life and Death of Barry Seal, there is no evidence to support any claims that Seal worked for the CIA. Hahn was, in fact, part of the task force that pursued Seal in the 1980s. He uses, in fact, several case documents and first-person accounts to dispel this idea and other half-truths about Seal.

7 The cartel Didn’t Kill Barry Seal’s Brother-In-Law With A Car Bomb

Tom Cruise as Barry Seal flying a plane in American Made.

American Made shows a dramatized version of Lucy’s brother JB, played by Caleb Landry Jones, who steals money from Barry and ends up attracting the attention of the local authorities. The cartel decided to deal with JB, even though Barry opposed it. JB then gets killed by a car bomb. The real Barry Seal, however, never had a brother-in-law who was killed by a car bomb.

6 The Government Didn’t First Take Notice of Barry Seal’s Smuggling Cuban Cigars

Alejandro Edda as Jorge Ochoa in American Made.

The government’s interest in Barry Seal was claimed to stem from his smuggling of Cuban cigars, in American Made. However, this is a significant leap from reality. The real Barry Seal caught the government’s attention through his involvement in drug trafficking, not cigar smuggling. His criminal operations were far more severe and complex, including the smuggling of substantial quantities of cocaine and marijuana, and these various criminal activities are what led to his assassination, as explained in American Made’s ending.

5 Involvement With Pablo Escobar And The Ochoa Brothers Was Exaggerated

Alejandro Edda as Jorge Ochoa in American Made and Jorge Ochoa in real life.

The real Barry Seal was not as acquainted with the cartel bosses as the movie suggests, according to Del Hahn’s book. He didn’t meet Pablo Escobar and the Ochoa brothers in person until 1984, after his arrest, while he was working as an informant for the DEA on an undercover operation. American Made portrayed Barry Seal as having a close-knit relationship with drug lord Pablo Escobar. However, in reality, Seal was just one of many pilots involved in drug trafficking for the Medellín cartel, making this portrayal an exaggerated account.

4 Barry Seal Wasn’t Recruited By The CIA In A BarTom Cruise as Barry Seal and Alejandro Edda as Jorge Ochoa in American Made.

Yet another debated myth, since no facts remain on whether Barry Seal was working with the CIA or not. However, American Made dramatized Seal’s recruitment into the CIA by showing him being approached in a bar. There is no factual basis for this recruitment scene, marking another departure from reality. Even so, Barry Seal was indeed allowed to fly out of the country and return with illegal drugs that the feds made sure never reached their targets. Undercover cameras installed on Seal’s plane captured photos on the tarmac of a Nicaraguan airport. Images showed Pablo Escobar with Sandinista government officials and soldiers, who were loading cocaine onto Seal’s plane.

3 The Plane Crash Incident Was Dramatized

Tom Cruise with his arms crossed as Barry Seal in American Made.

In Tom Cruise’s American Made, Barry Seal crash-lands a plane in a suburban neighborhood while escaping the DEA, who ordered him to land. Barry emerges from the plane covered in cocaine. He hands wads of cash to a kid on a bike, telling the boy, “You never saw me.” There’s no evidence that anything similar to this memorable scene ever happened in real life. Tom Cruise has always been known for performing his own stunts in intense action sequences, and American Made was no exception, which explains this moment’s inclusion in the film.

2 Seal Was Fired When TWA Learned About His Weapon Trafficking

Barry Seal and Tom Cruise as Barry Seal in American Made.

Barry Seal did not quit his job at Trans World Airlines (TWA) out of boredom, choosing to live life on the edge as American Made reveals. In 1974, he was fired for falsely citing medical leave when he was actually off trafficking weapons. He had been arrested in 1972 by the U.S. Customs Service for trying to fly 1,350 pounds of plastic explosives to anti-Castro Cubans via Mexico, according to Del Hahn’s book Smuggler’s End: The Life and Death of Barry Seal.

1 The Zero-Gravity Love Scene Never Happened

American Made Ending Explained

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the famous American Made love scene with Barry Seal and his wife in zero gravity was an invention of the movie. Director Doug Liman told Vulture that when preparing for American Made with Cruise, he got the inspiration to create the fictional scene. Liman said, “He put the airplane into a parabolic arc and pinned me against the ceiling, and right at that moment, I had this inspiration. … Wouldn’t it be fun if they were fooling around in a plane and the plane went into the same kind of parabolic arc, and they got pinned against the ceiling?” The steamy scene was one of the many attention-grabbing moments in the movie.

Sources: TIME, Vulture, Smuggler’s End: The Life and Death of Barry Seal