We are against wars, but do we know the stories behind those wars?
Regarding the subordinates of the drug dealers,
I want to justify the names of the children who will not be on the stage for a long time and who will receive lunch boxes:
Are all the brothers of the drug dealers still alive? They kill a lot of people for money, but poverty means that being a member of a drug dealer makes them as proud as they want to be a member of the Communist Party. In a city that has been used to blood since childhood, what is the difference between killing a person and killing a pig? Yes, they kill again and again, but I can see the mercy in their sins in their eyes.
They are guilty, but at the same time they are innocent victims. As innocent as the little boy who picked up the dazzling gun and pointed it at the police. (That's an age that doesn't understand anything!) Especially the younger brothers who are behind the boss, (their final result can only be a corpse in the wilderness!) Especially the young man who clicked the explosion button in white clothes People, (he thought he was doing a sacred job seriously!) They just wanted to protect the wife and daughter at home.
It's a pity that they were born at the wrong time, no one can blame them.
About Soldiers:
Still remember the charismatic bribes of cop after cop when the male lead in episode 2 showed up. That's corruption, but in a country where work is only 22 dollars a month, how would you choose? In a country where choosing not to be bribed is to choose to be assassinated, how would you choose? In a barracks where two-thirds have been bribed, how would you choose? In an era when all teachers and teachers have fallen, how do you choose?
Regarding the army commander:
I only know that he is too handsome. In the face of bribery, don’t just let people get away with a penny; in the face of assassination, he plays a higher standard than his own bodyguard; he performs tasks and rushes behind the front of the brothers; In the face of drug dealers, brave and resourceful, do what they say, and that sturdy?, too tm man!
About the blackening of the protagonist:
1. When the protagonist entered the country for the first time, he was placed at the airport by the manager who had been bought by the drug dealers in Colombia
. 2. His beloved cat was killed
3. His informant was betrayed by his own team members, but he did not know who
it was . It is the bottom line in the male protagonist's heart that has not been destroyed . 4. The cruel
terrorist attack by drug dealers on the
people surrendered to the gang _ I sold it myself... About the drug dealer's boss pablo: when he appeared, he was full of charisma, more charismatic than the old white in Breaking Bad, bigger than the old white in Breaking Bad Ambition, he really wants to do something for that poor family, but it's a pity that Americans just can't control their drug dealers and go to other people's drug dealers, I watched DEA push impulsive and ignorant drug dealers to a corner again and again, to them Finally demonized. I have to admire his acting skills and deductive spirit. He didn't know the Colombian language before the deduction and learned it six months in advance! When it comes to the seventh or eighth episode, the four-minute long shot is smooth and natural, just ask who can break it! Although the blackening made the characters unpleasant in the end, the actors were definitely likable. If you don't like it, please don't spray it, it's just a personal opinion
View more about Narcos reviews