It stars Bellows as a Canadian businessman who becomes involved in an assassination plot in Cuba after befriending a hard-partying man played by Greg Wise.
In a warehouse, Anders questions a former associate, Benny, whom he accuses of selling out their boss, an international arms dealer named Libby.
Jack says he is a Canadian insurance executive on his way to a conference, and Rita reveals that she has agreed to some kind of deal that she likens to human trafficking.
At one point, Harry stops at gangster Pepe's house to pay a debt, warning Jack to stay quiet.
A flashback reveals Harry to be an assassin hired by the Broker, an elderly British woman, to kill Libby, who she says owes her money.
Jack awkwardly declines an offer of cocaine, and the two go to a club, where they meet two women, Day and Night, who they take back to Harry's hotel room.
Jack insists he is an innocent bystander and gets rid of the man by making an empty promise to visit his hotel room.
In the warehouse, Libby angrily asks Jack if he is the unluckiest man alive or a shrewd assassin who has engineered the entire plot.
[8] Bruce Kirkland of the Toronto Sun called it "quirky and worth seeing", though not comparable to the work of its biggest influence, Alfred Hitchcock.
[5] Ken Eisner of the Georgia Straight wrote that the story is "sometimes clumsily told" and may test audiences' suspension of disbelief, but the cinematography makes up for it.