
*A few episode spoilers.*
It’s fitting that we’re now officially halfway through season 1, because episode 5 marks an important turning point in the story. It also initiates the show’s ties with the original Narcos, and while I think this series is terrific in its own right, it’s still neat to get these callbacks.
After a harrowing experience in the last episode, Félix has decided it’s time for a big move: he travels to Colombia in the hopes of securing a deal to expand into cocaine trafficking. While he’s away, the Tijuana plaza has to deal with retaliation from the local cocaine smuggler, and the DEA thinks they’ve found a new way into his organization.
Kiki is especially out for blood here. He’s been recklessly gung ho about this whole thing from jump, but at the moment, he’s incensed with the cartel. One of DFS officers in Félix’s pocket pulls over his wife at the start of the episode, intimidating her in a deeply twisted way. The encounter makes Kiki more determined than ever to take Félix down, and that resolve only gets more and more personal as the episode goes on.
In Tijuana, pretty much all the cocaine passes through the hands of Falcón—Félix had to meet with him in a previous episode to assure him that setting up a plaza there wouldn’t intrude on his turf. But now that Félix is looking to get into coke, Falcón doesn’t take too kindly to the thought of sharing his suppliers and his business. While Félix is out of the country, Falcón makes his opinion heard loud and clear.
As I said, we go back to Colombia here, placing the current timeframe somewhere within season 2 of that show. We see some of the heads of the Cali cartel, along with Pablo Escobar and some notable members of his operation (plus hippos!) I haven’t revisited Narcos since my first watch, but it’s neat to see these characters again—especially seeing how they interact with Félix.
The big question throughout this episode is why? Why, when Félix has the marijuana trafficking corridor completely sewn up and is making more money than he could ever spend, would he want to start trafficking cocaine? Why would he want those additional complications, that notoriety and heat? Why would he want to get into bed with dangerous Colombian cartels? Numerous people ask him, and he gives a simple answer—“If I don’t, someone else will.” And that answer may be true as a statement of fact, but it’s not the actual reason that’s driving him, and waiting to hear Félix’s real motivation lends plenty of tension to the episode.
All things considered, Félix’s first trip to Colombia goes pretty well (barring some light abduction.) As usual, it’s so interesting to see how he tailors his approach to whoever he’s pitching to. He’s told that Cali is headed by someone who’s “shrewd, a real businessman,” and he’s appropriately professional. He’s deferential while still touting the success of his operation, and he brings along his friend Isabella to vouch for him.
But it’s in Félix’s (involuntary) meeting with Pablo that Diego Luna really shines. Félix has just been brought very forcefully to Pablo, when he’d intentionally planned to avoid Medellín altogether—he’d been told that Pablo “has very strong emotions” and decided that was more mess than he wanted to get into. But now he’s face-to-face with the temperamental man he snubbed. He can feel how dangerous this is. But Félix keeps steady, unflinchingly truthful. He doesn’t try to flatter or placate Pablo. He shoots straight, and he doesn’t blink. It’s an impressive scene, and it’s such a treat to see Luna play off of Wagner Moura here. They worked together before in Elysium, but even though they only share a single scene in this episode, it’s a meaty, actorly scene that allows both of them to show off their talent.
