PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,7/10
1,5 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
El narcotraficante más poderoso de su tiempo, Amado Carrillo Fuentes, se convirtió en el jefe del cartel de Juárez y fue apodado el Señor de los Cielos por usar su flota de aviones para tran... Leer todoEl narcotraficante más poderoso de su tiempo, Amado Carrillo Fuentes, se convirtió en el jefe del cartel de Juárez y fue apodado el Señor de los Cielos por usar su flota de aviones para transportar drogas.El narcotraficante más poderoso de su tiempo, Amado Carrillo Fuentes, se convirtió en el jefe del cartel de Juárez y fue apodado el Señor de los Cielos por usar su flota de aviones para transportar drogas.
- Premios
- 3 premios y 2 nominaciones en total
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I love the show I love everything about this show when I first found it by accident I just had surgery and I watched all 4 seasons I was so hooked on it I stayed up all-night watching it and now their season 5 and I can't watch it. Why only on Telemundo channel that makes me so sad I'm looking all-over to see where I can find it in English? Do I have to wait until season 5 is over and it goes on Netflix please help.
Rafael amaya's masterful performance is worth seeing in El senor de los cielos alone. He reminds me so much of al pacino's performance in scarface. He's that good and el senor de cielos is an amazing action packed series. Its no wonder it won an emmy in 2013. Once rafael leaves the series dies with him. Best seasons are 1 to 5. I hope telemundo gets Rafael back for a season 8 or a least for a movie on netflix ending el senor de los cielos the correct way with rafael in it to beginning to end.
Must say got in to this series because of Narcos. The problem with this series is the writing, last two years sort of corny. Drug kingpins couldn't or aren't as stupid as this series makes them out to be. It's a miracle that Cabo also escapes serious harm... OMG... Season seven ending is about as stupid as they come too. Get real and rethink the writing, we want to see the Castillas win or we wouldn't watch! Bri
Well as season 9 just finished. I hate to admit I'm losing interest. It's the same old. As in the real world people get tired of it so they move on. Well for me I'm feeling all the best characters who help make this show great well they all gone except for Aurelio of course. But even they tried killing him off and the show was flopping so yeahhh. I miss the gun fights even tho their props manager has no idea what firearms to use and teach these fools properly how to pretend to shoot or the proper stance. I hate how Cabo fires the AK. I would slap him stupid for that alone. And in no way with a mini uzi will over a .30 caliber.
The story of Amado Carrillo Fuentes, the drug-lord who even flew 727's full of cocaine to the Sonoran desert and left them abandoned, is one of those things in Mexican folklore that reaches the whole social ladder. In this series, produced by Telemundo and manufactured by Argos, the narrative reveals what most people knew from newspapers and the official TV chain, Televisa.
In Season 1, the story and the characters are believable, true to the lore and truly scary. It's something that Colombians and Mexicans know too well. The characters are easily recognisable and the performances of some of the actors are very good. But, story-wise, it's one of those unforgettable series, along with the Caracol productions of El Cartel de los Sapos and El Señor del Mal, Pablo Escobar.
It's sad to see that, to keep the franchise going on forever, Telemundo decided to go to the lengths of creating something so badly scripted as the rest of the seasons. It's a shame to see how the characters lose their soul, the story is contrived, absurd and predictable to the smallest detail. It becomes a classic telenovela, instead of the powerful and dramatic series Season 1 was.
Definitely, the production values are good, but never on par of those from Caracol's lush environments, period props, enticing characters and the powerful Colombian actors. It may be almost impossible to have a character that instills fear as Andres Parra's interpretation of Pablo Escobar in El Cartel de los Sapos and Pablo Escobar, El Patron del Mal.
I guess you should stop when things are done and never try second parts when they're not needed. Numbers never lie. That's what happened to this fantastic story when they decided to "create" something people would never feel related to. A pity. Watch Season 1, you won't be disappointed,
In Season 1, the story and the characters are believable, true to the lore and truly scary. It's something that Colombians and Mexicans know too well. The characters are easily recognisable and the performances of some of the actors are very good. But, story-wise, it's one of those unforgettable series, along with the Caracol productions of El Cartel de los Sapos and El Señor del Mal, Pablo Escobar.
It's sad to see that, to keep the franchise going on forever, Telemundo decided to go to the lengths of creating something so badly scripted as the rest of the seasons. It's a shame to see how the characters lose their soul, the story is contrived, absurd and predictable to the smallest detail. It becomes a classic telenovela, instead of the powerful and dramatic series Season 1 was.
Definitely, the production values are good, but never on par of those from Caracol's lush environments, period props, enticing characters and the powerful Colombian actors. It may be almost impossible to have a character that instills fear as Andres Parra's interpretation of Pablo Escobar in El Cartel de los Sapos and Pablo Escobar, El Patron del Mal.
I guess you should stop when things are done and never try second parts when they're not needed. Numbers never lie. That's what happened to this fantastic story when they decided to "create" something people would never feel related to. A pity. Watch Season 1, you won't be disappointed,
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesMexican actor Rafael Amaya (Aurelio Casillas) also plays the same character in the Netflix series Queen of the South (2016) and the Telemundo series Señora Acero (2014) and El Chema (2016), his character being based on real-life drug lord Amado Carrillo Fuentes who was known as "The Lord of the Skies" because of the fleet of planes he used to transport drugs. Fuentes died in a Mexican hospital in July 1997 after undergoing extensive plastic surgery in an attempt to alter his appearance.
- ConexionesReferenced in El Fantasma de mi Novia (2018)
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