The first trailer for the upcoming comedy-thriller “Cocaine Bear” has arrived.

Directed by Elizabeth Banks (“Hunger Games,” “Zack and Miri Make a Porno”), the film is based on a stranger-than-fiction story involving a former Army paratrooper-turned-drug kingpin, a horrific parachute accident and a Georgia black bear who simply found himself in the wrong woods at the wrong time.

It’s unclear, based on the trailer, how much the film will deviate from the real story, if at all. In any case, the otherworldly circumstances that led to a black bear ingesting a mountain of cocaine are more than adequate for the big screen.

Andrew Carter Thornton II was once an Army paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division, reportedly receiving a Purple Heart during the 1965 Dominican civil war intervention. He then became a Kentucky-based police officer in the Lexington department’s first narcotics squad, where his counterparts described him as a “‘Starsky & Hutch’ type of cop,” according to a 1985 Washington Post story by Sally Ann Denton. “He drove fast cars, popped in and raided people.”

When kicking in doors lost its edge, Thornton embarked on an array of vocational pursuits, earning a law degree, becoming “a daring pilot, a master of martial arts who boasted of killing a German shepherd with his bare hands, and an expert sky diver — famous among jumpers for ‘pulling low,’ or releasing the chute at below 2,000 feet,” Denton wrote.

By the late 1970s, his thrill-seeking talents led him to a new frontier: drug smuggling.

Thornton started with marijuana and weapons, which landed him a jail sentence in the early 1980s. Believing he could be of use as an informant, however, police cut him loose after an abbreviated stint. But an ambitious Thornton quickly resumed his new trade, graduating to a Kentucky cocaine network before assuming the role of kingpin in a smuggling ring known simply as “The Company.”

For years, Thornton experienced significant success smuggling cocaine into Appalachia — that is until 1985, when the Army veteran was piloting a cocaine-filled Cessna twin-engine 404 that began to malfunction over the southeastern U.S.

In a last-ditch effort to save the product on board, Thornton began dumping bricks of cocaine out over Georgia’s Chattahoochee National Forest. He then strapped approximately 75 pounds of it to his body before bailing out of the Cessna, which crashed unmanned into a North Carolina mountainside.

Unlike the jumps Thornton performed in the Army, this one went awry. The 40-year-old kingpin’s chute never fully opened.

When he smashed into the earth on a Knoxville, Tennessee, property belonging to local resident Fred Myers, “Thornton was wearing a bulletproof vest, special night vision goggles, a Browning 9 mm automatic pistol, a .22-caliber pistol and several clips of ammunition,” according to the Post report.

“He had with him survival gear, a stiletto, $4,500 in cash, six gold Krugerrands, food rations and vitamins, a compass, an altimeter, identification papers in two different names, a membership card to the Miami Jockey Club and the key to the airplane. His Army duffel bag contained 34 football-sized bundles of cocaine that were marked ‘USA 10.’”

Following the accident, bewildered resident Fred Myers told the New York Times, simply, “I’ve never had a landing in my backyard before.” Classic Fred.

Fifty miles to the south, “Pablo Eskobear,” as the 175-pound black bear became known, was making his merry way through the forest when he stumbled upon the vast supply of cocaine that had filled Thornton’s aircraft hours earlier.

The aptly-named “Cocaine Bear” went to town accordingly, consuming brick after brick until eventually, well, dying.

Medical reports revealed that the bear’s stomach was filled to the brim. The powdered buffet inevitably led to heart, respiratory and renal failure, on top of yielding a brain hemorrhage, stroke and hyperthermia.

That very bear now sits on (stuffed) display in the Kentucky For Kentucky Fun Mall in Lexington, an unnecessarily-named facility that also sells Cocaine Bear merchandise like stuffed bears, tees, puzzles and coffee mugs.

As for the film, it is co-produced by Phil Lord and Chris Miller, both of whom worked alongside Banks during “The Lego Movie” installments.

Cast members include Keri Russell (“Dawn of the Planet of the Apes”), the late Ray Liotta (“Goodfellas”), Alden Ehrenreich (“Solo: A Star Wars Story”), O’Shea Jackson Jr. (“Straight Outta Compton”) and Kristofer Hivju (“Game of Thrones”).

Watch the NSFW trailer below.

Observation Post is the Military Times one-stop shop for all things off-duty. Stories may reflect author observations.

Jon Simkins is the executive editor for Military Times and Defense News, and a Marine Corps veteran of the Iraq War.

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