Download Money Heist Season 3
It's not that i do not appreciate the Netflix series Money Heist (La Casa de Papel). It's more that I never thought it might have such international allure.
It was a touch surprising that a show with such a selected set of characters who are Spaniards to the core and such a definite use of the language -- bordering on the poetic and hard to completely grasp even for native speakers sometimes -- has become a world success. It's Netflix's most watched non-English series. it has been praised by the likes of Stephen King and has won a world Emmy.
If you enjoyed seasons 1 and a couple of and perhaps even learned some Spanish within the process, this cynical Spaniard has excellent news for you: You'll enjoy part 3. A lot. (If your Spanish is decent, you'll read the review therein language.)
After stealing around a billion euros from the Royal Mint in Madrid and managing to urge away with it, the band of criminals is back together, with some new and welcome additions. Their own Río (Miguel Herrán) has been captured for reasons better not spoiled, and that they actually need him back. they need a replacement , bigger heist to tug off.
Yes, they still look fabulous. Even once they wear those red jumpers with Dalí masks. (I'll say from experience that those aren't necessarily flattering.) And yes, El Profesor (Álvaro Morte) still has an equivalent nerdy-sexy vibe and seems capable of just about anything -- aside from dancing. One scene set to Who Can it's Now by Men at Work is as painful to observe as you'd expect when El Profesor is forced to point out his lack of rhythm.
I enjoyed every minute of the three episodes from season 3 that Netflix made available for review. I'm counting the times until July 19, when all eight episodes are going to be available for streaming and I'll get to understand what the hell happens within the end.
Some of the narrative mechanisms of season 3 ring a bell. Sometimes things appear as if they'll go terribly wrong, but within the end our criminals rise to the occasion and that we realize they were following a meticulous plan albeit we were led to believe otherwise.
Like in previous seasons, action within the episodes doesn't follow a chronological order. during this season, there are three moments in time or storylines that are mixed and interwoven. One takes place years ago, the opposite a couple of weeks ago and therefore the last within the present. you will get to understand a particular reaction or get to know a particular new character only Álex Pina, the show's creator and co-writer, wants you to. it is a very effective way of telling a story, and Money Heist would be a way more conventional show, and an uneventful one, if things were explained within the order they happened.Then there are the jokes, and that is where some characters shine quite others. Denver (Jaime Lorente) and Nairobi (Alba Flores) still be two of the foremost consistently funny criminals. Mainly because they have a tendency to decorate their speeches with the foremost flourished words. they assert things like "Cariñitos míos, en los próximos minutos os jugáis las pelotas," which very roughly translates to "My darlings, within the next jiffy you're betting your balls;" "Profesor, al solomillo" (Profesor, let's move the chase); or "Itaboy!" ("It's a boy" in Denver's very limited English).
Feminism continues to play an enormous role within the series. We're talking a few show that came up with the term "empieza el matriarcado" ("the matriarchy begins"). There's an argument the gang has at 3 a.m. in an Italian monastery during season 3 during which Nairobi tells Denver how old-fashioned he's ("Antiguo, que eres un antiguo"). Palermo (Rodrigo de la Serna), one among the new characters, vindicates the patriarchy during a way that's neither subtle nor correctness . Yet it'll probably cause you to laugh. and therefore the yelling only ends when El Profesor, in his blue-and-white striped Oxford pajamas, makes an appearance and asks everyone to please behave and return to bed.
Besides de la Serna, Money Heist's new characters include singer and actress Najwa Nimri as Alicia Sierra. Her character is described as "la reina de las hijas de perra" ("the queen of sons of bitches") and proves to be a ruthless woman keen on catching our sympathetic criminals.
Aside from the new faces, one among the most differences between this season and therefore the previous ones is that Madrid is not the only main setting. The show feels more international with sequences shot in Florence, Panama City and therefore the Guna Yala archipelago.
Please watch La Casa de Papel in its original version with subtitles. Only then will you learn to admire the sweetness (and meaning) of a word like "jarana" or an expression like "eso es liarla pardísima."
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