Like the previous reviewer, I also came here following Manu Ríos' success in Elite. But I was positively surprised by how good this mini series is. The story is not (and some characters) free of clichés, but the portrait of middle-class families in Madrid feels genuine and refreshing. But what really shines for me is the storytelling.
Because each episode narrates what happened through the eyes of a different character, the viewer constructs each individual personality differently, depending on who's telling us the story. This leads us to a very interesting build up to the final episode, where you expect Marcos to act in a way that's different from who really is. And that leaves the viewer thinking about how reality really is subjective and depends on who's describing it.
Because each episode narrates what happened through the eyes of a different character, the viewer constructs each individual personality differently, depending on who's telling us the story. This leads us to a very interesting build up to the final episode, where you expect Marcos to act in a way that's different from who really is. And that leaves the viewer thinking about how reality really is subjective and depends on who's describing it.