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'Narcos' Season 2 review: Show has exceptional acting

By Maureen Blas | Sep 01, 2016 10:45 AM EDT
Boyd Holbrook attends AOL Build Presents Discussion on Season 2 Of Netflix's 'Narcos.' with Boyd Holbrook at AOL HQ on August 30, 2016 in New York City.
(Photo : Getty Images/Nicholas Hunt) Boyd Holbrook attends AOL Build Presents Discussion on Season 2 Of Netflix's 'Narcos.' with Boyd Holbrook at AOL HQ on August 30, 2016 in New York City.

Before the premiere of "Narcos" Season 2, the show will give an insight of what the second season is all about. Just like other series shown on Netflix, "Narcos" provided a different experience in watching, considered to be out of limits.

The amicable crime series is found to be explicit when it comes to looking, tone, and voice. However, it will have a hard time to provide its viewers something new, since it's stuck to its own presentation of its initial season.

"Narcos" is bound as well as restricted to Pablo Escobar's ripped-from-the-headlines stories. Season 2 blatantly exposes his real life and fall as the well-known and formidable drug kingpin. Somehow, "Narcos" Season 2 is a bit ponderous and redundant. It also gives too much emphasis on the main character, which could become nonsensical, IGN reported.

Checking on "Narcos" Season 1, it ended with Pablo Escobar, played by Wagner Moura, being swarmed by a small army in one of his storehouses. The first episode of "Narcos" Season 2 will justify how he was able to escape and hold off for a bit as DEA agent Steve Murphy's, played by Boyd Holbrook, private life cave in due to his delusion of capturing Escobar. The drug kingpin's get away provides no true excitement as the prison guard let him go as he was told to do so, Collider reported.

Escobar's ruthless and well-organized network both assassinations and agony at will, keeping the neighborhoods going. They offer money to pay for the doctor's bills, child care, groceries and profusion of financial issues concerning the unfortunate. America converges only on the drug kingpin who has exposed their population to be rampant with addiction and not on the communities of sick and perishing adults.

The adjudication that may be given to "Narcos" Season 2 is exceptional for the acting as usual. The show will premiere on Friday, Sept. 2 on Netflix.

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