It's tough to imagine a
time when this country wasn't struggling with cocaine brought into the U.S.
from Latin America, and the violence that often accompanies it. But when
Netflix's new series Narcos introduces us to brash Colombian smuggler Pablo
Escobar, it's the late 1970s and Escobar is busy with other contraband.

As the narrator of the
fictionalized series, American Drug Enforcement Agency officer Steve Murphy
(played by Gone Girl's Boyd Holbrook), explains: "Pablo was making a
killing in the smuggling business. Cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana — you name
it. At the time, Pablo owned half the police in Medellín."
Escobar, one of the
world's best-known drug kingpins, built an empire fueled on cocaine sales. His
operation has been called "the General Motors of drug trafficking."
In the show, Agent
Murphy's partner is killed by a hitman from Escobar's cartel, and the officer
moves south of the border to help bring the kingpin down. Murphy is also a
device to draw Anglo viewers into the story of drug traffickers, known as
"narcos" — he can't even speak Spanish when he lands in Colombia.
The 10-episode series
tells the story of how Escobar united his fellow smugglers in the 1980s into a
ruthless cartel of traffickers and even got himself elected, briefly, to the
Colombian legislature. The show unfolds like Goodfellas meets Scarface, with Murphy
providing narration to guide viewers through an unfamiliar world.
DEA agents Javier Peña
(Pedro Pascal, left) and Steve Murphy (Boyd Holbrook) work together to bring
Escobar down in Netflix's Narcos.i
DEA agents Javier Peña
(Pedro Pascal, left) and Steve Murphy (Boyd Holbrook) work together to bring
Escobar down in Netflix's Narcos.
Daniel Daza/Netflix
"Pablo and his
partners built super labs the size of small cities," Murphy says.
"From leaf to paste to powder, they produced 10,000 kilos a week. At $50,000
a kilo, that's $5 billion a year."
According to Murphy,
the narcos turned to smuggling cocaine in the 1980s after an enterprising
chemist taught Escobar how much more money he could make from the white powder.
Brazilian actor Wagner
Moura is particularly compelling as Escobar: He looks so much like him, the
show often uses news footage and photos of the real Escobar to heighten the
realism. In another nod to authenticity, all of the dialogue between Spanish
speakers is in Spanish with subtitles. That includes the moment when Escobar
lets a battalion of police officers know they can take bribes from him to
overlook his smuggling, or accept the consequences.
"Plata o
plomo," he says. Translation: "Silver or lead."
But while Escobar was
building his pipeline and fortune, Murphy describes how the consequences were
piling up in America. "From '79 to '84, there were 3,245 murders in
Miami," he says. "And outside the tourist bureau and the cops, no one
much cared about that. What got the U.S. government to take notice was the
money: billions of dollars a year all flowing from the U.S. to Colombia — and
that America couldn't take."
Like Henry Hill's
voiceover in Goodfellas, Murphy's narrations are a smooth way to introduce
viewers to an unfamiliar world. But they can also be distracting, as when
Murphy gets all philosophical about how the ambitions of the narcos were
reflected in the literary concept of magical realism:
"There's a reason
magical realism was born in Colombia. It's a country where dreams and reality
are conflated; where, in their heads, people fly as high as Icarus. But even
magical realism has its limits."
And so does some clunky
narration.
There's another
problem: Telling the story from the viewpoint of Murphy — the only white
American guy in the core cast of characters — helps keep the audience at arm's
length from the Latino characters, especially the noncriminals.
For some, Narcos will
revive the most troubling TV depictions of Latinos as criminals and drug
traffickers, despite the show's heroic efforts to humanize everyone involved.
But it's also a compelling and complex story, especially for fans of classic
crime stories (like The Godfather) who might be curious about how cartels came
to dominate the modern cocaine trade.
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