Diablero gay
Diablero
This Mexican fantasy series seems to be reaching for Stranger Things territory with its dark and otherworldly storyline, but it's too deliriously bonkers to be taken as seriously. Here are just a few things that exist in the same place and time in Diablero's world: vengeful demons who can possess any human at any age but whose essence can be captured in a soda bottle, a "demon appraiser" in a rough part of town that tests the quality of imprisoned devils by injecting the wicked potion into defunct animals, and an organized fight club in which participants allow themselves to be possessed for the duration of the battle, just for kicks. Whew! And we haven't even gotten to the part about the Upside-Down-like chasm underneath the church, where dark forces are holding a (Eleven-like) young young woman for mysterious reasons.
It's goofy and kinda dumb, but it's fun anyway, particularly for viewers who will relish the slanted bits and pieces of Mexican culture that slips through the supernatural goings on. When two fellas see to talk over a personal challenge, they watch soccer and sip tequila; ranchera music, not hip hop, is the background at a tough-guy party scene; Elvis hangs ou
- General info
- Available formats
- Synopsis:
"Diablero" is centered around Father Ramiro Ventura (Christopher Von Uckermann), a fallen priest who finds himself seeking the aid of legendary "diablero" or demon hunter Elvis Infante (Horacio Garcia Rojas). With the aid of Nancy Gama (Gisselle Kuri), a modern day superhero, this improbable trio sets in motion a series of events that could resolve the fate of mankind...
- Actors:
- Christopher Von Uckermann, Gisselle Kuri, Fátima Molina, Horacio Garcia Rojas, Rocco Narva, Mariana Botas, Humberto Busto, Cassandra Iturralde, Dulce Neri, Quetzalli Cortés, Dolores Heredia, Flavio Medina, Matías del Castillo, Michel Duval, Ela Velden, Rocio Garcia, Mahoalli Nassourou, Sofía De Llaca, Hoze Meléndez, Danae Reynaud
- Directors:
- José Manuel Cravioto, Rigoberto Castañeda
- Producers:
- Pedro Uriol, Juan Gordon
- Writers:
- Pablo Tébar, Verónica Marzá, José Rodríguez, Laura Sarmiento Pallarés, Daniel Sánchez Arranz, Luis Gamboa, Gibrán Portela, Bernardo Esquinca, Augusto Mendoza, F.G. Haghenbeck
- Genres:
- TV Move & Adventure, TV Dramas, TV Horror, TV Mysteries, TV Sci-Fi & Fantasy, TV Thrillers
- Countries:
- Mexico
- BBFC:
- Release Date:
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Netflix itself also exploited place in its Mexican promotion of the film. Ubiquitous posters of Roma were placed side by side in the streets with promos for the streaming giant’s new Mexican series Diablero, released on December 21, suggesting a complete convergence o
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