Review of La Muerte

Queen of the South: La Muerte (2018)
Season 3, Episode 10
7/10
Back to Bolivia
2 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Teresa and co are having an another day in the office when El Santo send one of his creepy angel to tell Teresa there's a meeting and it's a must to attend, alone. James and Pote aren't fond of leaving her on her own, but Teresa insist she must, saying she protected them the last time they were there and that she can handle herself. She gets a gun and a stupid card for 'protection' from big bro Pote haha.

Teresa arrived in Bolivia, where she get dressed and get to the meeting, little to her suprise when she find out all his other dealers are present. El Santo called them because someone among them has betrayed him and that no one is leaving until the "Judas" is ratted out. Sasha, a lady Teresa befriended earlier, turn on her and insisting she's the traitor.

Teresa is about to be dealt with, when a bomb hit them out of nowhere. It's Devon with the DEA, hold on, how come this guy is with the agency all of a sudden? wasn't he selling coke earlier on? or was that part of a grand plan to catch drug lords? if so, when didn't they catch Camila and others since he had concrete evidence against them back then? I don't understand.

Anyways, with El Santo and Teresa 'miraculously' surviving the attack, they must now take a drug that'll put them in a coma-like sleep, then hide in the mud Inorder to avoid being detected by the drones. Teresa wake up the following morning from her comfortable sleep, in the mud, quite healthy, and go on to have a shower, a pedicure, dress her hair and have a breakfast of course, she then find El Santo, now distraught 'cause the DEA took his newly born baby, the baby he literally cut out of his mother btw. She comfort him then left. She then somehow find a boat and a satellite phone and call Pote, saying there's a traitor amongst them with Pote saying it might be James.

In summary, A good episode with good performances but mostly filler, as the whole thing could be summarize in one sentence; Teresa has lost her supplier.
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