Audience Reviews
View All (41) audience reviews Snopeeh The outrageous nature of the series is engaging and really makes you feel what is like to fight the corruption within Brazil. The only tragic part is that the whole series is based on real facts. Rated 5/5 Stars • Rated 5 out of 5 stars 03/21/23 Full Review gerardo daniel w Es una buena serie mostrando la realidad y la cruda vida de los brasileños hoy en día por una maldita corrupción y el petrobrazil Rated 4.5/5 Stars • Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 12/30/22 Full Review Audience Member A brave report of Brazilian recent history! Rated 5/5 Stars • Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/09/23 Full Review Audience Member There are two ways of assessing this series. It is a pamphlet, and it tries to be a work of art. As a pamphlet, it is a lie, or a series of lies, and it is part of parcel of a full blown coup d'etat that severely damaged Brazilian democracy. From that point of view, which is difficult to avoid when you are one of the victims of this series, it would not deserve even one star.As a work of art - though it is difficult to determine whether such status is genuinely aimed at, or just an excuse for slander - it has several other problems.One of them is being the next "work of art" from the same artist as "Narcos", which makes comparisons unavoidable - and unfavourable to this series.In "Narcos", there were real and fictitious characters - and some real characters were fictionalised, like Hermilda, Pablo Escobar's mother. But Gaviria and Samper were actual presidentes of Colômbia, e there actually was a minister called Botero. Likewise, Escobar, La Quica, the Rodriguez Orejuela brothers, or the DEA agents, Murphy and Peña, though fictitious actions are attributed to them, were real people. And the main characters were historical characters, while the fictiious characters, as Sandoval or Fernando Duque, fit well in the plot - doubtlessly somebody had do play simiilar parts in real life - just like the fictionalisation of Hermilda made her, to say the truth, a more interesting character than the real Hermilda (who, ironically, was much more stereotypical than her fictional avatar)."The Mechanism", however, resorts to a somewhat ridiculous move: Lula is portrayed as "Higino", Dilma as "Janete", Youssef as "Ibrahim", Sérgio Moro as "Rigo". This betrays a certain insecurity, which is easily explainable: in "Narcos", events are history; it is unnecessary to suppose the involvement of Botero with the Cáli Cartel, which cost him a conviction and later the exile in Mexico. But "The Mechanism" deals with very recent events, which in fact haven't yet fully unfolded. Thence the fake names: you would not like to be in the situation of attributing to Lula illegal acts that he may not have practiced at all. Which also prompts a much lower level of subtility than in "Narcos". There, Botero shares information to the Rodriguez clan, but we only learn that together with the "detectives" - Botero never appears saying any illegal absurd on screen. That would undermine "Narcos'" point, which was to tell a story; but "The Mechanism" point is to make a political statement, so the president must be seen on screen doing blatantly illegal things, so he can't be named Lula, thence he is "Higino"...So "The Mechanism" wants to be brave, but instead it is quite cravenly: it hides behind the screen of fiction to deny that it is saying what it actually wants to say. It again is a reason why it is a bad pamphlet: it is not an actual denounciation. As a narrative, it borders in ridicule, like a detective novel in which we already know who is the criminal, while the detective still struggle to find it. As an openly political piece, it is too weak to be taken in serious.Add to this the complete disaster that is Selton Melo's character, "Marco Ruffo" (and a character has to be really, really mistaken for Melo being unable to save it). He is an envious crook, and a stupid crook to booth, frustrated because after twenty years as a "delegado" - a police chief - in the Polícia "Federativa" (another ridiculous deal, the renaming of Brazilian institutions, in the case, the Polícia Federal) he only has an old car and a small villa for estate, while those he investigates are filthy rich.But such is life; no one gets to be a millionaire on a police chief salary, much bigger it surely is than Ruffo's constant baby-crying over it. As only a complete fool would imagine such a possibility, what transpires is that Ruffo, like the most despicable envious people, doesn't actually want to do well - just that everybody else does as badly as himself, and that such is his idea of "justice": that nobody be richer, or happier, or more recognised than himself.This doesn't make a character empathetic, except perhaps to the small part of mankind that is similarly affected by pathological envy. And without such empathy, it is very difficult to get on board with such an awful, incompetent and unhinged policeman, who threatens a suspect with a razor to the throat, purposefully destroys the motorbike of another suspect, commits arson in a justice court because he dislikes the plea bargain proposed by the public attorneys, threats arson against a bureaucratic precinct because the paperwork seems abusive (the best line in the series is perhaps by the public servant who has to deal with that threat, something like, "you can do that, but I still need the document"), and threats to murder a physician on the issue of an insanity certificate. That is the kind of policeman who no one wants to meet, the kind that uses his distinctive to harass and intimidate common people, the kind of bitter and irresponsible bully who uses his position to screw up other people, and not to serve the population, or even to serve Law.Agents Murphy ou Peña may be stereotypical or mistaken - in fact, if "Narcos" is true to real life, they are bad cops, who collude with torture and random murder, and accomplicit, even if vaguely critical, of "policy" that consist in making alliance with a gang in order to defeat another one. But their motives are both better and more plausible. Besides an authentic devotion to the abstract role of the police, and a better notion of "justice", they want to destroy Escobar and the Rodrígues - and are willing to commit their own crimes and misdemeanours, if necessary or apparently necessary - but not because Escobar and the Rodríguezes are richer than them; on the contrary, because this is what the "law" demands, or because the crimes of these mafia bosses are truly revolting.Ruffo, on the other hand, has only one reason for pride: he never accepted a bribe. But looking at the kind of illegal things he is happy to make, one has to wonder why on Earth doesn't he accept a bribe after all. We are left with the feeling that he would happier, and even a better person, if he just could do it...It is a pity that the time and efforts of good actors are wasted on this sham. Rated 1/5 Stars • Rated 1 out of 5 stars 01/09/23 Full Review Audience Member Como brasileiros gostaríamos que essa série fosse puramente ficção mas a verdade é que ela mostra o mecanismo que esta moendo o Brasil por dentro, o câncer que esta matando uma nação. Rated 4/5 Stars • Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/09/23 Full Review Read all reviews