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But Kiki manages to get away thanks to the hoods they all have to wear, snags a piece of the harvest (which comes from a truly endless field of weed), and gets back to the city right as his wife gives birth to their baby boy. It’s almost smooth sailing all the way through, except for a brief brush with El Azul, who almost recognizes him while watching the workers get back on the buses to head back to town. (I wonder if this will hold true for the rest of the season - Gallardo’s half of the show is certainly bloodier, but where he can act pretty openly, Kiki has to deal with a lot more subterfuge in order to get his way.) He follows the trucks again, but this time, he makes it all the way to a little outpost where, after ingratiating himself with one of the workers, he dives right into working on the farm. Make no mistake, Gallardo’s half of the episode is fun, but Kiki’s realization of the magnitude of what he’s dealing with is the more exciting part of the episode. Then there’s Kiki’s expedition out to the pot farm.
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For another, a lead on a gangster takes them straight to the governor’s son’s wedding, which, being arranged by Gallardo, is a veritable Who’s Who of the city’s wealthy and powerful - including those known to be in the drug trade. They’re initially still resistant - especially after a surveillance flight that they request turns up nothing but photos of empty desert - but the evidence that something is rotten in the state of Denmark (well, Guadalajara) is piling up to the point that they can’t ignore it anymore.įor one thing, it turns out that the surveillance photos are from a year ago. Though there’s still bureaucratic red tape pretty much everywhere, Kiki at least has Kuykendall & Co. Every puzzle piece has snapped into place (if you’re watching this - or any Netflix show, really - you probably don’t need me to tell you that there’s always some narrative fat to be trimmed, but that’s neither here nor there), and the season has broken into a sprint. Though, stumbles and all, this season of Narcos has been moving at a relative brisk clip, the third episode noticeably turns up the heat. Narcos seasons 1-3 and Narcos: Mexico seasons 1-3 are available to watch now on Netflix.Okay, now we’re cooking.
#NARCOS EPISODE 3 SUMMARY SERIES#
The series is expected to start filming in 2022.
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A devoted mother, Blanco's lethal blend of charm and unsuspecting savagery helped her expertly navigate between family and business leading her to become widely known as the Black Widow." Netflix's description of the upcoming series says: " Griselda chronicles the real-life of savvy and ambitious Colombian businesswoman Griselda Blanco, who created one of the most profitable cartels in history. She has, however, been portrayed on screen before, with Catherine Zeta-Jones taking on the role in 2017's Cocaine Godmother and Jennifer Lopez due to star in a planned film biopic called The Godmother. Griselda Blanco, who was known as Black Widow and the Cocaine Grandmother, was a powerful cocaine trafficker in the 1980s, yet despite her associations with the Medellin Cartel, she was not a character in the original series Narcos. "Griselda Blanco was a larger-than-life character whose ruthless but ingenious tactics allowed her to rule a billion-dollar empire years before many of the most notorious male kingpins we know so much about," Vergara told The Hollywood Reporter. Vergara has been developing the project for eight years with producer Luis Balaguer.
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