The first season of Narcos, an American crime thriller drama web television series produced and created by Chris Brancato, Carlo Bernard, and Doug Miro, follows the story of notorious drug kingpin Pablo Escobar, who became a billionaire through the production and distribution of cocaine, while also focusing on Escobar's interactions with other drug lords, DEA agents, and various opposition entities.[1][2]
Bruno Bichir as Fernando Duque – a Colombian lawyer who represents Pablo Escobar, acting as his liaison with the Colombian government, based on Guido Parra.
Raúl Méndez as César Gaviria – a Colombian economist and politician and the 28th President of Colombia
Manolo Cardona as Eduardo Sandoval – the Vice Minister of Justice in President Gaviria's administration[11]
Luis Gnecco as "La Cucaracha" or Mateo 'Cockroach' Moreno – a Chilean drug chemist who flees Chile and join forces with Pablo Escobar before being executed by Escobar for selling information due to personal dispute.
Julián Díaz as El Negro or "Blackie" (né Nelson Hernández) – a member of the Medellín Cartel, who is frequently seen by Escobar's side (in real life, Escobar had a close friend named Jorge "El Negro" Pabón[12])
Juan Sebastián Calero as Navegante – a violent associate of the Cali Cartel who works as their top henchman
Jon-Michael Ecker as El León or "The Lion" – a childhood friend of Escobar's who becomes his first drug smuggler into Miami and subsequently runs Escobar's Miami operations
Cristina Umaña as Judy Moncada – a former leader in the Medellín Cartel who, after Escobar murdered her husband Kiko, led a breakaway cartel and allied with the Cali Cartel and Los Pepes; she is based on the real-life Dolly Moncada[13]
Christian Tappan as Gerardo 'Kiko' Moncada, Escobar's business partner
Orlando Valenzuela as Fernando Galeano, Escobar's business partner
Juan Riedinger as Carlos Lehder – Lion's contact in the United States, tasked with distributing the cocaine
Thaddeus Phillips as Agent Owen – a CIA agent on the Colombia task force
Ariel Sierra as Sureshot – one of Escobar's sicarios
Carolina Gaitán as Marta Ochoa – the Ochoas' sister, who is kidnapped by M-19
Laura Perico as Marina Ochoa – the Ochoas' sister, who has an affair with Escobar's cousin Gustavo
Vera Mercado as Ana Gaviria – the wife of César Gaviria and the First Lady of Colombia
Juan Murcia as Juan Pablo Escobar, Escobar's young son
Alejandro Buitrago as Velasco
Jorge Monterosa as Trujillo
Andres Felipe as General Jaramillo
Luis Miguel Hurtado as El Paisa, an Escobar employee and truck driver
Juan Pablo Espinosa as Luis Carlos Galán – a Colombian politician whom Gaviria works as a personal secretary, who runs for Presidency before getting assassinated.
Jair Arango Meneses as Fredy Rodriguez - son of Medellin cartel drug lord Gonzalo Rodríguez Gacha.
Steve Murphy narrates:
In Colombia, 1989, the Centra Spike, a US Army Special Ops unit tasked with gathering intelligence, observes a call by Pablo Escobar's sicario, Poison, about a party at La Dispensaria. A Search Bloc team, led by Colonel Carillo, executes everyone in the bar.
During the 1973 Chilean coup d'état, several drug makers are lined up and shot; Chilean drug chemist Cockroach survives and brings his product to Colombian smuggler Pablo Escobar, who later executes him. Pablo and his cousin, Gustavo, start transporting cocaine to Miami using their friend the Lion and Carlos Lehder. Their business is booming and they form partners with Gacha and Ochoa brothers. DEA agent Steve Murphy joins the war on drugs in Bogota.
2
2
"The Sword of Simón Bolívar"
José Padilha
Chris Brancato
August 28, 2015 (2015-08-28)
With time Pablo's business brings him in so much money that he buries the cash in his fields and employs an accountant, Blackbeard to track the buried cash.
Steve Murphy and his wife Connie Murphy has trouble at the airport security, who scans their passports to be faxed to Pablo's sicarios.
Pablo makes moves to enter into politics and finds support from an upcoming journalist Valeria Velez,with whom he begins an affair with.
The Communist radical group M-19 kidnaps Marta Ochoa, which enrages the whole Medellín Cartel. Pablo calls a meeting to discuss about safety and operation of the cartel at Las Margaritas. Javier Peña, Steve Murphy's DEA partner, gathers intel about this meeting from his informant and sends her to gather more intel. She falls into trouble causing Javier and Carillo to come to her escape.
Steve finds their cat murdered and hung in his apartment.
To enter politics, Pablo with help of Valeria meets with lawyer of New Liberals party, Fernando Duque. They put forward a plan to bribe the Minister of Justice Rodrigo Lara Bonilla, to buy support for Pablo's campaign, who reluctantly agrees. Pablo's wife, Tata dislikes Valeria. She later goes into labor and gives birth to a girl child. Pablo's campaigns win him the election by a good margin. Javier and Steve comes up with plans to prove Pablo's drug trafficking background and finds the mugshots taken earlier.
Minister of Justice, Rodrigo publicly testifies in Congress about the bribe and asks Pablo to leave the congress. An enraged Pablo resigns from the position and orders the execution of Rodrigo.
4
4
"The Palace in Flames"
Guillermo Navarro
Chris Brancato
August 28, 2015 (2015-08-28)
Despite a new extradition treaty and the anti-narco policy by presidential candidate Luis Carlos Galán, the U.S. puts more money into fighting communism. Javier and Steve bribe General Jaramillo to bring in Carrillo as head of Search Bloc. Search Bloc receives intel about Pablo's hideout fincas, while raiding Steve finds an address that lead them to Blackbeard and evidence to Pablo's drug trafficking.
Some evidence among these prove a link between Communist-ruled Nicaragua and Pablo, leading the DEA receiving more resources. They catch Carlos Lehder and extradite him.
Pablo teams up with M-19 guerrilla,Ivan offering him 2 million US dollars to raid and destroy evidence against him at Palace of Justice. Elisa talks to Connie about Ivan's plans. She is hidden at Javier's. The infamous Palace of Justice Siege leaves many victims and no evidence against Pablo. Pablo later kills Ivan.
Pablo's extreme methods put the narcos on the brink of war with Carillo and the government. Peña tries to protect his witness.
6
6
"Explosivos"
Andi Baiz
Andy Black
August 28, 2015 (2015-08-28)
Peña and Carillo close in on Gacha. Murphy tries to protect pro-extradition candidate Gaviria from a notorious assassin connected to Pablo. Carillo manages to find Gacha with the help of an informant who is later killed by "Poison" as Pena leads an attack on Gacha's hideout resulting in both sides suffering heavy casualties (including Gacha's own son) before Gacha himself is killed. Pablo manipulates a young man to be a suicide bomber under the guise of recording Gaviria. At an airport Gaviria plans to board a plane for his next campaign speech but Murphy convinces him to postpone it unknowingly saving his life as the bomber then boards Avianca Flight 203 and activates the bomb.
The hunt for Pablo seems to be over after he makes a deal with the government, but Murphy and Peña - and the Cali Cartel - have other plans.
10
10
"Despegue"
Andi Baiz
Nick Schenk & Chris Brancato
August 28, 2015 (2015-08-28)
Pablo's activities in prison provoke the government into taking extreme action. Murphy and Peña face a situation of their own.
Reception
Critical response
The first season received generally favorable reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes a review aggregator surveyed 45 reviews and judged 78% to be positive. The site reads, "Narcos lacks sympathetic characters, but pulls in the viewer with solid acting and a story that's fast-paced enough to distract from its familiar outline."[14] On Metacritic, Season 1 holds a score of 77 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating "Generally favorable reviews".[15]IGN gave the first season a 7.8 out of 10 score calling it "Good" and reads "It's a true-to-life account, sometimes to a fault, of the rise of Pablo Escobar and the hunt that brought him down laced with stellar performances and tension-filled stand-offs. Its blend of archival footage reminds us that the horrors depicted really happened, but also manage to present an Escobar that is indefensible but frighteningly sympathetic."[16]
The season received generally positive reviews from many media outlets. Writing for The Philadelphia Inquirer, Tirdad Derakhshani reviewed the season positively, calling it "Intense, enlightening, brilliant, unnerving, and addictive, Narcos is high-concept drama at its finest."[17] The New York Post's, Robert Rorke said, "Catching Escobar then becomes an exciting and suspenseful story arc, and makes Narcos the first cool show of the new season."[18] Joshua Alston of The A.V. Club judged "Narcos is frequently funny and just stylized enough to amplify the entertainment value without minimizing the gravity of the subject matter. It’s an eminently bingeable show even as it makes a strong case for moderate consumption."[19] Television critic, Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter also reviewed the series positively saying, "The series begins to find its pacing not long after, and we see the strength of Moura’s acting, which to his credit never races, in the early going, toward over-the-top menace or the drug-lord cliches we're all used to at this point. Credit also the fact that Padilha brings a documentary feel to Narcos."[20]
Nancy deWolf Smith of The Wall Street Journal wrote, "The omniscient-narrator device works very well for a complex story spanning many years and varied sets of players."[21] Critic Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times said, "It’s built on sharp writing and equally sharp acting, as any good series needs to be."[22] The San Francisco Chronicle's David Wiegand wrote, "Virtually every performance is equal to the quality of the script, but Moura is especially compelling as he manipulates the seeming incongruities of Escobar’s character to heighten his aura of unpredictable menace.... Brancato does make one significant misstep by having the entire series heavily narrated by Murphy."[23] Chief TV critic Brian Lowry of Variety also lauded the series saying, "The sparely told project weaves together a taut, gripping narrative, in stark contrast with the flatness of its characters and color scheme. All told, this Gaumont production is the kind of binge-worthy TV addiction that Netflix was born to import."[24]
Some were more critical towards the show including chief television critic Mary McNamara of Los Angeles Times who wrote, "It's a grand if inconsistent experiment that, from the moment it opens with a definition of magic realism, wears its considerable ambitions on its sleeve."[25]New York Daily News's David Hinckley, moderately reviewed the season and said, "One of the strengths of Narcos is its refusal to paint anyone as purely good or bad."[26] Writing for IndieWire, Liz Shannon Miller said, "An unlikeable character, no matter the circumstances, remains unlikeable, but an unlikeable character trumps a bland blonde man whose position of authority appears to be his only really interesting character trait, no matter how much voice-over he utters."[27] Josh Bell of Las Vegas Weekly quipped, "Mostly the show is a breezy tour through history, sometimes informative but rarely affecting."[28]
^"Entrevista exclusiva con la nueva chica Bond mexicana". Publimetro (in Spanish). Metro International. March 12, 2015. Retrieved March 12, 2015. Hago a Valeria Velez, un personaje distinto basado en la amante de Pablo Escobar, Virginia Vallejo, un personaje importante en Colombia