In the second season, notorious drug kingpin Pablo Escobar is on the run, with the Colombian authorities in relentless pursuit -- and determined to put an end to his illegal activities.
Edit - Renewed for two more seasons! Teaser trailer announcement for S3.
Release date: September 2nd on Netflix.
Spoilers: For two weeks after release, you are to spoiler tag your posts (ex:
Wait, Pablo dies in this??
Links:
Reviews:
- NY Times:
Season 1 covered roughly 15 years, tracing the rise of Escobar and cocaine throughout the 1980s. Season 2 is more claustrophobic, and, since we know Escobar was killed by the Colombian authorities in December 1993, has far less time to work with.
And so it takes us ever deeper into the byzantine worlds of narco-crime and South American politics. Escobar has more than just law enforcement to worry about. Rival drug dealers are trying to capitalize on his organization’s weakened state, and groups with political rather than criminal agendas are seeing the manhunt as an opportunity to advance their causes.
The Maritza story line is representative of one thing Season 2 has that Season 1 didn’t: significant roles for women. There is Judy Moncada (Cristina Umaña), one of those rival drug dealers, who is bent on avenging some particularly brutal deaths Escobar doled out. There is Claudia Messina (Florencia Lozano), who is sent from the United States to take over the Drug Enforcement Administration’s somewhat anemic efforts to assist in the manhunt. And Escobar’s wife, Tata (Paulina Gaitán), becomes more assertive about securing her family’s safety. - AV Club:
So how does Narcos faithfully tell its true story while preparing to lose its leading man and its most compelling character?
Based on the first five episodes of season two, the plan is to approach the story as if there’s nothing to hold back. The Escobar saga is lengthy and complex enough that it could fuel multiple seasons if newly installed showrunners Eric Newman and Jose Padilha so chose, and the first season ended on a muted note that suggested a willingness to pad the story with stylish but meandering detours. But the latest 10-episode batch represents Narcos with its brake lines cut—more brisk, more satisfying, and free of the responsibility to lay expositional groundwork. If for no other reason than the paring back of too-clever narration by lead DEA agent Steve Murphy (Boyd Holbrook), Narcos is becoming its best self in its run up to an extreme makeover should Netflix re-up.
Narcos’ first season chronicled the first 15 years of Escobar’s rise to infamy, and the season picks up in 1992 after Escobar’s prison escape and only covers the last year before his murder in 1993. It’s difficult to overstate how different Narcos feels without the temporal sprawl, how it feels more epic after radically reducing its scope.
Extending Narcos beyond season two seems like a mistake, in part because Moura’s performance provides the show’s gravity and its sense of purpose. But perhaps there’s way more story to be told. After all, Escobar didn’t invent the cocaine trade, he just perfected it, much as the producers of the show about his life have found a way to make their product considerably more potent. - IGN:
But Narcos' second season gets a bit chewy and repetitive in the middle. It also tends to over-romanticize Escobar, going to almost ridiculous levels by the final three chapters. I can see why though, to some extent, despite the man's monstrous and murderous actions. As was the case in Season 1, Wagner Moura is absolutely riveting as Escobar, so much so that more of an effort is made this season to spend time with the character and draw us into his heart and mind, making things feel less like a documentary reenactment than last year.
That being said, Season 2 really lays it on thick with regards to humanizing Escobar, for better or worse. The end result being, well, he's the draw. The one we care about is the crazed mass killer. Much of this feels similar to another Netflix international production, Marco Polo, where Benedict Wong's Kublai Khan, and his direct family drama, became that show's addictive nucleus. It's funny too that both Wong and Moura gained weight for these historical roles, though Moura seems to be aided by a bit of excessive padding this season.
Cast:
Wagner Moura as Pablo Escobar, Pedro Pascal as Javier Peña, Boyd Holbrook as Steve Murphy
Joanna Christie as Connie Murphy, Paulina Gaitan as Tata Escobar, Jorge A. Jimenez as Poison
Eric Lange as Bill Stechner, Alberto Ammann as Pacho Herrera, Diego Cataño as La Quica
Promo photos: