Funnily enough, one of the ways Pablo’s legacy lived on was his hippos. He had four of them, and they weren’t able to be moved after his death because of their size. They eventually escaped his compound and spread out into the surrounding rivers. They bred like crazy and now there’s over 100 wild hippos in Colombia. Their nickname is the “cocaine hippos”.
@@dislikemyvideochallenge5049 but so many people would not watch the season 3 bcs we got so attached to these characters so they had to bring pena back
@Roniixx-hp8lc when in the hell is a fat shoeless pablo escobar with no ammunition in his pockets going to reload his gun between the largely continuous movie scenes with 1 second cuts
As a Colombian… I am very disappointed… the guy had ZERO COLOMBIAN ACCENT…. Most of the protagonists are not even Colombian and worst of all… they made Murphy a hero when in reality he was a 🐱 and never participated in any operation… he just arrived after the fight… PU-SSY THAT GUY WAS
I love how accurately they had the detail small parts of the raid. Such as the headshot on Pablo and how he was dressed matched with the 1993 photo, for example
Maybe the clothing and bullet wounds were accurate, but the raid in itself made by the police in this movie was very poorly and unrealistically done. For example like one guy commented above, same cop goes first in every scene and is always rushing alone with no one to help and that actually indicates lack of interest in fine details.
I mean it’s pretty hard to find someone that looks EXACTLY like him. But I think Wagner Moura did an amazing job as Pablo and is best Pablo out of anyone that’s ever played him.
@@MYNAMEizCLARENCE I agree, he captured Pablo's demeanor, characterization and mannerism so well, you easily overlook the difference in physical resemblance. To me that was Pablo Escobar.
Dude. Mad respect for that guy in the hat with the shotgun. Shot multiple times for entering the home first. Gets up, and races up the stairs only to be shot again. Then, somehow gets up again and chases Pablo into the bedroom beating the guy in the red shirt to it only to get shot again. Guy was committed.
He's talking about Los Pepes and Search Bloc, but yes, Escobar was a narcissistic hypocrite to an almost comical extreme. Dude blew up a passenger plane with hundreds of innocents just to kill one person, then had the gall to think of himself as a victim. What he truly hated about Los Pepes and Search Bloc was that he couldn't buy them off.
Good attention to detail: they've dressed Escobar exactly as he was dressed when shot -- shoeless, rolled up jeans, and a red t-shirt under a navy polo shirt.
They deserve worse honestly. And their kids and family too. Inflect to their families what they did to countless others in front of their face before granting them the mercy of death .
Its true. The director and cast wanted to keep this scene as historically accurate as possible. The actor who played escobar even insisted to get shot in the head. With real bullets.
The most interesting thing about pablo's actor is that not only he was brazilian but he actually played as the captain of Elite Troop, a movie about BOPE who is formed by narco hunters. He was the commander of them all and now it's literally the opposite 😂😂
“Evil turned out not to be a grand thing. Not sneering Emperors with their world-conquering designs. Not cackling demons plotting in the darkness beyond the world. It was small men with their small acts and their small reasons. It was selfishness and carelessness and waste. It was bad luck, incompetence, and stupidity. It was violence divorced from conscience or consequence. It was high ideals, even, and low methods.” - Joe Abercrombie
@@einarabelc5 As a former soldier whose seen combat, bad people do most often take the form of incompetent degenerates, so I would say the quote is mostly true; however, unlike what the quote that guy posted would lead you to believe, there are indeed people out there who are highly competent and Machiavellian, but they are also just men at the end of the day. That quote just reads like cope to be honest Edit: I just looked it up and that quote is from a novel 😂
@@TheCoolCucumber Its principle. It signifies that no matter what condition youre in, how big or small you are in, you are under arrest for the crimes you committed. You will be handcuffed alive and well or handcuffed dead and shot.
Steve Murphy: You take a good long look at evil, and it reminds you of one... **gunshot** Steve Murphy: CUT!!!!! I'M NOT DONE WITH NY GODDAMN LINES YET.
Some say he killed himself to avoid being sent to an American prison wasn't many things he feared but the America justice system was the one thing. It kinda makes sense seeing as how El Chapo tried to avoid being sent to an American prison as well.
It’s cool how they almost got everything right based on that picture they took after they killed Escobar, the clothing of Pablo, the gunshot wounds, the roofs and surrounding areas.
Had fake order for battery powered lights come through at work a few weeks ago. Were addressed to Pablo Escobar in Cali. I was like, "Well, they musta dug him in deep."
@@therealslimshady3662 I'm quite aware of that too. But you have to able to see the different between an acting and real life. I'm here to enjoy the movie
The greatest tragedy is not ever publicly knowing what happened to his countless millions stashed in cash, the reality being that even though it is dirty money, it will be lost and serve no noble purpose. The real horror though is that, potentially, shadow men with no knowable faces ingratiated themselves shortly after this very scene..
There were rumors that Delta Force killed him. In the USA there is a group called ISA were present. But only intercepting phone calls. Also afterwards, the Russian mafia got involved in the cocaine trade.
According to me, in real life, they never finished off Escobar by giving him a shot to the head. They only shot him from a distance in the chest. That doesn't make sense. Why do it if they already have it? The 'long live Colombia' thing, they did say that.
@@cyberdrought944 Moron, I'm talking about the police/ army personal. Most criminals has no training in cover concealment while shooting. But thanks for the fail, my dude
There is no pablo Escober now but the business is going on and on .. and it's never going to stop ... That's the deal .. and that's how No one will ever forget Pablo Escobar ( El chapo)
Apparently filmed at the same house, and having him die at the exact spot he really did. Spooky. Although the details were slightly fuzzy as to how the fatal shot happened. Doesn't matter now I guess. I remember when this happened and thinking "Escobar? That guy from the 80s?"
I think people confuse pity for sympathy and that's just sad. If you feel bad for someone who suffered even if they are the worst kind of people, than that just means you have a better heart than those people ever did.
If you felt sympathy for him despite all his bombings, you have no principles or sense of justice or conviction. Or possibly short term memory. Soz fam just saying it how I sees it.
The sad part is, governments created Pablo and gave him his power. Every battle we fight is fighting ourselves. The goal is endless war, it's very profitable for defense contractors..
You're not giving any credit to Escobar for building his drug cartel? Escobar was created by his environment and he was an intelligent and ruthless criminal willing to do what ever was necessary to succeed. When you say he was created by the govt. you take away what he did. I'm not a fan of his or what he did but he did do it.
I remember reading an article (not sure how true this is) about how the CIA actually was working with Pablo. But you’re right these governments created a monster, then tried cleaning up their mess after it turns sour.
I love how they got all the correct weapons and period correct body armor and equipment being worn, and then completely ignore it how are those guys dying being shot with a hang gun to the chest wearing a soft vest?
“Those who see you will gaze at you, And consider you, saying: ‘Is this the man who made the earth tremble, Who shook kingdoms, Who made the world as a wilderness And destroyed its cities, Who did not open the house of his prisoners?’ - Isaiah 14:16-17 Yes, just as God told us; the devil is indeed a real letdown.
Schopenhauer's particular characterization of the world as Will is nonetheless novel and daring. It is also frightening and pandemonic: he maintains that the world as it is in itself (again, sometimes adding “for us”) is an endless striving and blind impulse with no end in view, devoid of knowledge, lawless, absolutely free, entirely self-determining and almighty. Within Schopenhauer’s vision of the world as Will, there is no God to be comprehended, and the world is conceived of as being inherently meaningless. When anthropomorphically considered, the world is represented as being in a condition of eternal frustration, as it endlessly strives for nothing in particular, and as it goes essentially nowhere. It is a world beyond any ascriptions of good and evil.
You brainless dope... in these days , handguns are equipped with 500 rounds ammunition pouch that can be attached to the pistol... your father must-have been dumb.
Even Pablo would had surrender they would had blown brains out they wasn't gonna let him live past that day Escobar had done too much damage to Colombia ...
Their goal is to get into the building. What are they supposed to do, just cancel the entire raid because they got shot at? You gotta go through the door if you want to get in the building.
Dog, literally special forces from all over the world follow a standard CQB doctrine, Speed Surprise and Violence of Action. As long as there isn’t a lmg pointed at that door, the smartest thing to do would be to quickly establish control of the entry point. Also most of the time, raids don’t end with the none of the raiders hurt on a prepared enemy, it usually ends with the pointman taking the first rounds then his homies grab his vest and throw his ass away from the funnel of death while supressing fire and chucking bangers or usually frags.
There is a museum of Escobar in Medellin, the owner is Pablo's nephew. The tourist guide told a story of how Pablo wasnt really killed by the cops, he left some sort of sign or hint for his family that he actually shot himself in the head because that was his choice and he wanted to die his own way, and then the cops made it look like they were the ones that shot him. Maybe that whole suicide thing is a made up story by Escobar's family or maybe is the truth since looking at the facts seem possible. Only the cops that day know the truth.
Netflix is usually great at doing these type of documentary series. But Narcos was in accurate in a bunch of things. Just from this short clip alone Escobar’s final conversation was with his son and not his wife. And Escobar did not have any face shots
Pues está es desde el punto de vista de los agentes que lo persiguieron, hay varias novelitas dónde hablan de esa basura de Pablo escobar, está es una serie de los héroes que lo acabaron