
*Episode premise spoilers, which spoils the end of episode 9.*
Season finale! This is the big one. Personally, if I’m picking favorite Diego Luna episodes, I’m going to go with one of the ones featuring Félix’s desperate dig-deep moments, but that’s as much my personal preference as anything. Luna is damn good in this episode, and he makes every moment count.
With Amado’s help, Félix was able to successfully bring in the 70-ton shipment in the previous episode, baiting the DEA with a massive bust only to turn the tables on them. Now that he’s pulled off such a power move, he’s done playing nice with anyone. Cali, Guerra, the plaza bosses—Félix is making it clear that he calls the shots, and anyone who doesn’t like that will deal with the consequences. A far cry from his federation days.
First of all, Our Flag Means Death fan that I am, I have to highlight Nat Faxon making a guest appearance in the stateside storyline with Walt, as a government type who’s eager to rubberstamp the DEA’s partial wins and move on. This character appeared in an earlier episode of the season, but I couldn’t place him then. Seeing him again in the finale, it suddenly hit me and I yelled, “Swede!” out loud.
This episode is full of great scenes and awesome moments, top-quality gangster shit. There’s a wild bust at the start of the episode, Chapo unknowingly kicking a hornet’s nest, and a devastating betrayal.
And rightfully so, most of the episode is centered squarely on Félix. The best scenes are devoted to his face-offs with various characters, including Pacho, María Elvira, and the plaza bosses. For I think the first time in the series, he’s able to leave a meeting with Cali with a swagger in his step. He’s all too aware that they planned on him losing their coke and using that as license to destroy him, but he neatly and ruthlessly sidestepped that grenade. Meeting with Pacho this time around, Félix has the upper hand and he knows it. “And your partners, have you talked this through?” Pacho asks when Félix is finally in a position to demand what he’s been after. Félix steadily replies, “I don’t have partners. I have employees.” There’s no frantic recalculating, no struggling to save face—Félix has all the power in this room.
But as has been true with Félix throughout the show, that power doesn’t come for free. The more he flexes his authority, the deeper the fallout. He indulges in revenge and throws his weight around in brutal ways, but it leads him to a tipping point.
Luna is excellent from start to finish, but I want to highlight a one-on-one scene he shares with Scoot McNairy. As with Kiki last season, Félix is really only in one significant scene with Walt, and it’s a doozy. It places them in a scenario where Walt should have all the power and approaches it as such, but Félix proves coldly impervious to everything he tries. We see it right from the start of their conversation, when Walt asks, “Do you know who I am?” and Félix replies, “No, not a fucking idea. But with that fucking accent, I’m sure I could guess.”
This scene is scary good, and I mean “scary” in more ways than one. You get a sense that this is a Félix who’s completely dropped his mask. Luna’s performance is quiet but chilling, and it’s fascinating to watch him toy with Walt.
The finale marks a turning point in the show. Much like the original Narcos pivots from Pablo to Cali in season 3, Narcos: Mexico changes direction going forward. Luna does appear in one episode of the third season, though, so I’ll save my final thoughts on the show until next time.

