Pablo Escobar resurrected in hit TV series in Colombia

Video



When "Pablo Escobar: The Boss of Evil" aired on June 4 in Caracol TV, the debut show attracted some 11 million viewers. Watch the trailer for the show. (Youtube)

Colombians have wanted to forget Pablo Escobar since his reign of terror in the 1980s.

But in what some are calling a form of catharsis, a Colombian television network is examining the darkest episode in the country’s tumultuous history with a true-life series about the flamboyant drug lord’s rise and fall.

(AFP/Getty Images) - A photo provided by Colombian television network Caracol shows Colombian actor Andres Parra impersonating late Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar during a scene of their television series “Escobar, the Evil Boss.”

Latest stories from Foreign

Afghan forces take security lead

Afghan forces take security lead

The transfer of responsibility for securing Afghanistan is soon marred by a bombing in the capital.

Bomber targets funeral in Pakistan

Bomber targets funeral in Pakistan

More than two dozen people were reportedly killed in the suicide blast in the volatile northwest.

G-8 leaders call for Syria peace talks

G-8 leaders call for Syria peace talks

In a concession to Russia, Obama and European leaders do not call for Bashar al-Assad to step down.

After a year, Egypt’s Morsi receives poor reviews from fellow Islamists

After a year, Egypt’s Morsi receives poor reviews from fellow Islamists

The Muslim Brotherhood-backed leader faces criticism for not implementing Islamic law.

Obama and Putin fail to resolve differences over Syria

Obama and Putin fail to resolve differences over Syria

President Obama and his Russian counterpart on Monday failed to resolve their significant differences over how to bring about an end to Syria’s civil war, as each leader steps up military support for opposite sides in the worsening conflict.

“Pablo Escobar: Boss of Evil” is mesmerizing television viewers in this country of 46 million. But it is sparking a debate over whether the series does too much to humanize Escobar, who won legions of admirers by building homes for the poor but also blew up an airliner and coolly ordered the killings of thousands.

“It’s a false and paltry version that will end up converting the worst criminal into an idol,” said Rodrigo Lara Restrepo, whose father, Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara Bonilla, was assassinated on Escobar’s orders in 1984.

The creators of the biopic, though, come from families victimized by Escobar.

Juana Uribe, a producer of the series, is the daughter of Maruja Pachon, who was kidnapped for seven months by Escobar’s henchmen, a saga memorialized in Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “News of a Kidnapping.” Uribe is also a vice president at Caracol, the network behind the series.

Her co-producer is Camilo Cano, whose father, Guillermo Cano, was the crusading editor of the newspaper El Espectador who was killed by the Medellin cartel’s hit men in 1986.

The producers say that 19 years after Escobar was gunned down on a rooftop in Medellin, it is the right time to tell his story in a fictionalized but largely true-to-life account.

“This is a way of doing a little bit of catharsis because this is what we went through, and there is no Colombian who doesn’t understand that,” Uribe said. “I had the possibility to analyze and had an open door to tell the story. I felt like we had a responsibility to do this.”

All sides of a drug lord

From the beginning, the producers and scriptwriter Juan Camilo Ferrand planned to explore Escobar from all sides.

The series, which first aired at the end of May, started out showing a headstrong boy raised in a close-knit family. He grows up to be the charming neighborhood dandy, winning the prettiest girl’s heart. Escobar later veers into Medellin’s criminal underworld, stealing cars and moving contraband before building a cocaine-trafficking empire like no other.

Andres Parra, 34, an actor who has played drug traffickers before, plays the cartel chief.

Taking a break from filming a scene on an airstrip on Colombia’s southern plains, Parra said the role has been a challenge because the Escobar in Ferrand’s script is not only a trafficker and killer but also a loving son and father. It is a side of Escobar that does not neatly line up with his popular image.

“I couldn’t understand how Pablo Escobar was able to be this wonderful father that he was to his two children and at the same time, practically in the same scene, being able to blow up a commercial airliner full of people,” Parra said. “How does this guy not feel any guilt? How can he blow up a building and just go back to his home and celebrate his 14-year-old’s birthday?”

Loading...

Comments

Add your comment
 
Read what others are saying About Badges