This season has fully explained: a rebellion by a scholar will not succeed in three years; but without a rebellion by a scholar, it will not succeed in three hundred years. Compared with Bavaro, the irritable big brother Bavaro, who personally holds a submachine gun and confronts a tough opponent in the jungle of Medellin, Colombia, I love this oil-headed drug lord Miguel, who is always frowning and thinking. In business, why fight and kill, everyone can make money.
In addition, this season's second protagonist, DEA agent Kiki, deserves a good critique-
His face is dark and unpleasant, and every time he is held back by himself and the politics of the upper echelons of the United States and Mexico, his luck is so bad that it can't be worse.
But, brother, it's not good to take your wife and children back to San Diego to live your own life. Taking anger against the whole system is like throwing a fist into the air, so why bother yourself. For the sake of work, you don't even care about the feelings of your wife and children? Wu Jingzhong, a famous Studebaker car lover and the old station manager of the Tianjin Station of "Hidden", once said: "Politics without human touch is short-lived." Kiki, who doesn't even care about his wife and children, obviously can't get the sympathy and support of the audience. of.
In addition, this old man's work style is also a problem - without asking for instructions, taking risks alone, investigating privately, blackmailing leaders, arrogating himself, belittling colleagues, disorganized and undisciplined, and putting personal competitiveness above organizational interests. A workplace taboo.
Kiki reminds me of a bbs landlord who is obviously not suitable for a civil service but he is selected for transfer. It looks awkward everywhere in the show? If I direct the second episode, let him get the lunch and get out?
View more about Narcos: Mexico reviews