Pablo Escobar, El Patron Del Mal Cam - Hot!
And that is precisely the point. In Colombia, El Patrón del Mal is not a "crime drama." It is a history lesson. For the rest of the world, it is the definitive reminder that there is nothing cool about a kingpin.
Essential viewing. Leave the rose-colored sunglasses at the door. pablo escobar, el patron del mal cam
In the sprawling pantheon of narco-fiction, two titans cast long shadows over the modern television landscape: Narcos (Netflix) and Pablo Escobar, El Patrón del Mal (Caracol TV). While the Hollywood gloss of Narcos introduced the world to Wagner Moura’s brooding, accented Pablo, it is the gritty, raw, and exhaustive 74-episode Colombian production that remains the canonical text for those who lived through the nightmare. And that is precisely the point
Parra does not look like the mugshot version of Escobar (he is leaner, taller), but he captures the voice . The nasal, high-pitched tone. The nervous laugh that precedes an order for assassination. The way Escobar would hug his mother tightly moments before ordering a car bomb that kills children. Parra’s performance is a masterclass in duality. One moment he is a loving father handing out cash in a soccer field; the next, he is a trembling sadist personally torturing a traitor. He does not ask for your sympathy; he demands your horrified attention. Narcos was a show about the DEA. El Patrón del Mal is a show about Colombia. Essential viewing