
My first time watching Narcos: Mexico, I remember I really enjoyed season 1, and of course Diego Luna’s performance was excellent, but season 2 was when things kicked it up a notch. This is a great episode, even as we’re still laying the groundwork for what’s to come.
Félix travels to meet with an opium trafficker from eastern Mexico, but Juan Nepomuceno Guerra’s “let’s get to know each other” approach tests the narco’s business-minded patience. When Amado learns that Acosta has gone awol in Juarez, the search for his boss takes him across the border. In Tijuana, Benjamín tries to hold the line despite increasing disrespect from their partners in Sinaloa and Enedina urging the family to make a deal in the States for themselves. And Walt’s team have abducted Sergio Verdin, ex-DFS and one of the chief men who tortured Kiki, but trying to interrogate a skilled interrogator proves difficult.
There are a good number of moving parts in this episode, and each element works well. Last season, we saw Amado clashing a little with Acosta in Juarez but ultimately coming to respect the old trafficker. In this episode, Acosta is causing headaches for him, disappearing without a word and grinding their plaza to a halt. When he finds out Acosta has gone to Texas, Amado is both annoyed and wary as he crosses the border to try and retrieve his boss. These two are always an interesting pair, because Amado often presents as smooth in a low-key way and just a little intimidating, but Acosta is completely immune to him. When he introduces Amado to his gringa girlfriend Mimi, Acosta refers to his all-black wardrobe explaining, “He’s always dressed like this. Dressed like a crow.”
Benjamín has been not-so-quietly seething for a while over the Sinaloans. They came into the cartel on the growing side, back when they were trafficking marijuana, and because they’re now running cocaine, a plaza that isn’t on the border might feel surplus to requirements. But they have a home connection to Félix, so they stick around, using Tijuana’s warehouses and trucks for their share of the product. The way Benjamín sees it, they should either grovel for the privilege of sharing Tijuana’s stuff, or they should get the hell out. Needless to say, the Sinaloans don’t see it that way. Tensions escalate in this episode, and all the while, Enedina is doing her best Lady Macbeth, encouraging him to make direct arrangements with American dealers behind Félix’s back.
Over with Walt’s crew, they’ve bitten off much more than they can chew. Walt explains in voiceover, “We [Americans] wrote the fucking book on interrogation,” and now trying to interrogate Verdin, who was trained by the CIA, is more than they bargained for. These scenes are so well done—it’s almost embarrassing to watch Walt just fecklessly punching Verdin and saying, “Give me the name,” over and over. He tires himself out long before Verdin breaks, leaving their captive with most of the chips in this situation. Kidnapping the doctor who administered adrenaline to Kiki was one thing. This is a whole different ball game.
Félix goes to meet Juan Nepomuceno Guerra as a man on a mission. He’s someone who almost always has an agenda or a strategy, and he’s thrown off when he encounters someone who seems impervious to that. Don Juan assures him that, while they will get to the business talk eventually, “First, we must talk life.” What Félix envisioned as a focused meeting turns into an all-day affair, complete with a big family party and Don Juan showing him the bridge he takes to traffic opium. Félix doesn’t push too hard, quickly realizing that won’t get him what he wants, but his body language makes it evident that he’s on edge the whole time. Diego Luna does a nice job of continually showing us where Félix’s head is, even as he’s hanging more in the background of a scene.
Félix has always been good at tailoring his approach to give people what they want, but Don Juan is a tough nut for him to crack. Fundamentally, he doesn’t particularly want anything Félix has to offer. Opium is a comparatively safe, reliable product that he grows himself and has control over, and he already has all the money he needs. He’s an older man who doesn’t really get caught up in Félix’s vision of the future. But Félix has a big idea that hinges on Don Juan’s partnership. So how can he convince him?
Throughout much of the episode, Luna’s performance is very understated as Félix hangs back, observing things and trying to figure out how to put his plan into action. But near the end, he has a big spotlight moment as he gives his final pitch to Don Juan. It’s a little reminiscent of Félix’s scene with Pablo Escobar in season 1, where we see him strip back the logic and the numbers and really get real with someone. We see the frequently unflappable man show his passion—it’s a wonderful scene, and Luna is incredible in it.

