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1-8 of 8
- Just when everyone thought the nightmare was over, a new menace strikes the city in a savage and bloody manner.
- After 100 years, a secret of Pancho Villa was revealed.
- Two physicists travel in time through a wormhole to 1838 and try to help some of their ancestors. The task won't be as easy as it looks.
- Somewhere in Northeast Mexico, where organized crime has created a paradise for drug trafficking, extortion and crime, Nacho Padilla returns home to avenge the death of his parents.
- Samuel is the frontman of a rock band. He and the band's number one fan, a girl named María, conceived a child under very special circumstances. The boy turns out to be a musical genius.
- Abel Terrazas is an incorruptible cop, whose life changes when he witnesses a cold-blooded murder carried out by the chief of a SWAT team and his men.
- In 1946, in the southern state of Sonora, Mexico, in the town of Huatabampo, a series of murders and strange disappearances began to occur. The first victim was a poor coffee seller who inexplicably showed up with his throat slit on the outskirts of town. The second was an 18-year-old girl who helped the village priest in the church. The local police commissioner, Vicente Ruiz, and the community itself, could not find an explanation for these events. The whole town went into a state of psychosis. Eusebio Yocupicio, an indigenous of the Mayo tribe, newcomer from the United States where he worked on crops in California and in a military psychiatric hospital, resumed friendship with three friends of youth in his town. Some local people suspected that this group of friends had homosexual tendencies, so they constantly suffered rejection and aggression from people. The police investigation of Commissioner Ruiz lasted several years, but several clues began to come to light, only a small mistake of the killers was missing to locate them... and so it was. An imprudence of Eusebius led the commissioner Ruiz to unmask the four murdering natives. A lightning arrest had to be made to prevent them from escaping. The entire town was shocked and shocked by the macabre police findings in the den of these 4 serial killers. There were 11 victims, three of them buried in the same house of Eusebius, sexually mutilated bodies and satanic rites led to the death penalty in 1950. However, the death penalty was acquitted in 1957 and his sentence was changed to 30 years' imprisonment. They were sent to the Hermosillo prison in Sonora, where Eusebio Yocupicio and Basilio Humo, the two most dangerous indigenous, were locked up in the underground prison dungeons, where heat, humidity and lack of light caused their premature death. In 1955, Eusebio Yocupicio died of tuberculosis, and the following year died Basilio Humo. In 1975, Leonardo Huipa and Adelaido Huipa were transferred to Huatabampo Sonora prison and released in 1976.