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The format is ideal for several reasons:
Season 1 takes viewers back to the 1980s, a time when the Mexican drug trade was fragmented. It was run by independent growers and small-time dealers. Miguel Ăngel FĂ©lix Gallardo, played with chilling sophistication by Diego Luna, envisions something much larger. He unifies these scattered plazas into a single, cohesive empire: the Guadalajara Cartel. FĂ©lix is not a chaotic outlaw; he is a corporate-minded strategist who understands that cooperation yields higher profits than conflict. The DEAâs Tragic Crusade
The Dual Audio format allows viewers to switch seamlessly between the original English/Spanish audio mix and the Hindi track. This is highly beneficial during fast-paced action sequences or complicated multi-character meetings where reading subtitles can distract from the cinematography. Technical Elements and Realism
The narrative splits into several major storylines. In Tijuana, the Arellano FĂ©lix brothers (led by BenjamĂn and Enedina) assert their brutal control over the border. In Sinaloa, a young and ambitious rises to prominence, determined to break the Tijuana cartel's monopoly. The most powerful of them all is Amado Carrillo Fuentes (JosĂ© MarĂa YĂĄzpik) , "The Lord of the Skies," who modernizes drug trafficking by using a fleet of jets to smuggle cocaine from Colombia.
The quiet, calculating mastermind who traded street-level deals for corporate-style cartel monopoly.
The original series features a heavy mix of English and Spanish. While the subtitles capture the meaning, watching Narcos: Mexico in offers several distinct advantages for Indian viewers: