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The first season of Narcos: Mexico has a score of 90% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 39 reviews with an average rating of 7.4/10, with the critics consensus stating "Dangerous, thrilling, and highly addictive, Narcos: Mexico's first season expertly expands the franchise by exploring new territory in the drug war's grim history and showcasing ...
Impossible Things (Spanish: Cosas imposibles) is a 2021 Mexican drama film directed by Ernesto Contreras and written by Fanie Soto. [3] Starring Nora Velázquez and Benny Emmanuel. [ 4 ] It premiered on June 17, 2021, in Mexican theaters.
Jon-Michael Ecker as El León (seasons 1-2), a drug trafficker based in Miami who works for the Medellín cartel. Adria Arjona as Helena Sotomayor (season 1), a top-class prostitute from Bogotá who acts as a spy for the DEA and the Search Bloc. Rafael Cebrián as Alejandro Ayala (season 1), co-leader of M-19 and Elisa’s boyfriend.
Production of narco peliculas started to peak during the late 1970s, when such films like La Banda del Carro Rojo (The Red Car Gang) were released. This film starred brothers Fernando and Mario Almada and Pedro Infante, Jr. [1] It spanned two sequels. [2] With the advent of VCR technology, around 1982, en masse production of narco peliculas ...
Amado Carrillo Fuentes was a smart man. He was also a man who was running out of time in the series finale of Netflix’s Narcos: Mexico. Amado raced against the clock, warring cartels, the law ...
Diego Calva Hernández (born 16 March 1992) is a Mexican actor best known for starring in the crime drama television series Narcos: Mexico (2021) and the black comedy drama film Babylon (2022). [1] For the latter, he received a nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Musical or Comedy. [2]
Narco Cultura is a 2013 documentary film about the Mexican drug war in Ciudad Juárez, directed by Shaul Schwarz. The two main focal points of the movie are Edgar Quintero of the narcocorrido band Bukanas de Culiacán and crime scene investigator Richi Soto.
The existence of Malverde is not historically verified. [8]Malverde is said to have been a carpenter, tailor, or railway worker. [1] It was not until his parents died of either hunger or a curable disease, depending on the version of the story, that Jesús Malverde began a life of banditry.