Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Lo que la vida me robó, ep. 110, Tues., 4/15/14: It's a zoo around here!
Labels: robo
EZ and Adolfo must be adrenaline junkies because they continue to use the cattle prod on Pedro. They both know how cold and dangerous he is so it makes no sense that they didn't wipe him out. EZ could always find a way to blame it on the cartel.
Adolfo is a total dolt for handing that folder to Maria and falling in with her plan. She is a total head case for even thinking that poverty would bring Alejandro to her; she never stood a chance with him. And now she's also tempting fate according to the avances?
This sounds like it's turning into CI and I don't like this trend.
Once again, the section titles were sheer perfection!!
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi was on my mind. :))
As for the story, oy, probably best to just keep my thoughts to myself.
You are the best, NovelaMaven. I especially appreciate the grammar! Yippee!!
Fatima
I LOVED Graciela vs. Sandro. What a pair of snakes those two are.
I'm so sick of JL. He had an amazing wife, fell in love with her, but the whole time couldn't let go of Montserrat. Why have him fall in love with Angie at all?
Victor is a dead man. EZ is sure to tell Pedro about the plan. Just kill him and Nadia already.
Adolfo is an idiot. STOP HELPING MARIA!
The concept of laws is just comical in Aguazul.
One grammatical note: it's se hubiera largado.
When watching tonight I realized that how I feel about this show is how I feel about another one of my favorites Dallas. I really don't like most of the characters but the goofy bizarre plot has me hooked.
Pole dancing in Maria's future? Isn't she supposed to be in hiding to save her life? If she takes that kind of chance maybe she is really harebrained Nadia's sister. LOL
Loved Ezequiel telling Pedro that he knew he was "un hombre mutilado" as well as telling him that Nadia was pregnant. For once, Pedro was out of the loop.
Glad to hear old Benjamin was being exhumed.
Jarifa
Now that Angela has exited the life of AguaAzul, we have a female navy officer on the scene. Hmmm--could she possibly develop into a romantic interest for someone?
Thanks for the grammar highlights, too. We need to maintain our legitimate interest in learning the language. It's a good thing we're not trying to learn legal procedures.
When they exhume Don Benjamin, I wonder if they'll discover he died from poisoning? Maybe he wanted Alejandro to take care of him in his last days because he didn't trust Juventino or some of the others.
Thanks so very much for this splendiferous recap! I love the headers, so cool ; )
Ay, yi, yi, what a pair that Sandho and Graceless, a match made in hell I must say! I wonder who will take out who first?????
It has been five days now since the Padre "disappeared" and no one has sought him???? I guess they are having too many personal problems and don't need the Padre's advice on some of them.
Addled and BM another match made in hell, I fear for Addled, cause his life expectancy is growing shorter all the time. I too think that Carlos will really appreciate tonight's epi ; )
I am so liking the female LT. I just hope she is not a dark horse on the side of evil. I want her to continue JL's fab work.
I am sick and tired of Monse and Ale. They are boring me, it's the same old, same old with them. Get a new attorney, fight for yourself and your wife and child and quit obsessing about that poor JL who is sitting in prison to save your butt yet again. Okay, okay, rant over. Jus' sayin'.
I am so liking El Capitan and I hope we see more of him. I hope Dimi also finds his way and stays strong and doesn't backslide.
As far as BM's plan goes she is truly living in fantasy land. I really want to see exactly how she will pull this one off.
Thanks again, NovelaMaven for this most perfect recap.
Though UA is right and characters seem to be altering personalities, I'm happy that EZ knows about Pedro's problem and why he's after Ale. I still think they may knock one another off.
Refugio is often a dunce but his reaction to the LT was ridiculous. And I say poor Refugio as his foolishness is about to get him in serious hot water w/his new boss.
Jarifa, ITA w/you when comparing this tn w/Dallas though I think I like a few more characters on Dallas than I do here.
My favorite treats with breakfast this morning:
"the Nadia and Victor Show is playing". Hysterical.
Was that the pluperfect form of those verbs?
"So the set up was María's idea! Well she did tell us she likes a good cockfight." good insight! Did anyone else see her 'disguise'? Like that is going to fool anyone, at all??
"Sangre Fria". Thank you for the new term. Not sure if it has application at my place of employment. At least I hope it never does!
"The male chorus of doom sounds in the background." My husband and I always giggle when that music comes up, it is so funny and overdone. Why hasn't SNL done a parody already of a TN?
Well, as far as comparing any TN to Dallas, Pedro makes JR look like a Sunday School teacher. (Which is another point I could have made during last week's discussion, I guess. )
Haven't seen this yet but it certainly promises to be interesting. Thanks!
JL for one--really. You just scattered your dear wife's ashes and already it's back to the crap with Monse. I agree with Vivi from yesterday, contrived plot point because a sane man worth his salt would have given up on Monse long ago. Do we see a slippery slope of JL descending to something outside of sanity and light?
The whole EZ/Pedo/Adolfo/Maria band of bandits...so sick of this gang. I kept pleading "just shoot already". And this was Maria's idea and Adolfo fell for it? From his looks last night, he KNOWS Maria is one tick away from a loon, so why do this? Boy, you can tell he and Nadia are siblings.
Ok, so who do we think the new woman will be hooked up with?
Daisynjay
We know who did it and that the poisoning was over a long time period, but Graceless would only laugh at Alejandro being a 3-time jailbird and Monserrat standing by him.
I neglected to mention this previously but Maria dancing in the club definitely puts her life at risk. However, this is probably part of her twisted plan because of her even more twisted delusion that Alejandro really loves her.
I really underestimated EZ; I thought if he were the one to find out about Pedro's lack of hombria he would keep that to himself to use later. Alas....
"Rats! Lemmings The Mongoose" and all of your animal references were great fun.
"José Luis Álvarez lies supine on the hard slab in his dark jail cell", "wary little pirouette" and "The male chorus of doom sounds in the background.\" were wonderful. "Refugio visits José Luis in jail, reminds him that while he molders in a wretched hole, Alejandro frolics in the sunshine" was sublime.
I must give credit to Adolfo for treading where no man should. No sane man of course. Inserting himself between two crazed killers is not good for his longevity. Unless Pedro has some other use for him, he will likely dispatch him for the lies he has spewed the dear padre.
Interesting that EZ did not reveal Maria lives. He obviously is going to keep his cards close to the vest so to speak.
EZ's downfall may be that he has an ego which Pedro's insensitivity can penetrate all too easily. Pedro's downfall is that he has no emotions.
Putting my money on Gracie. Sandho has no chance!
LaPaloma, I was also thinking Lt. Mónica Rentería was brought in to spice things up. Can we dare to hope that JL will survive and that the Lt. might be another chance at love? Daisy, I'm still peeved at his Monse obsession but overall still have fondness for the character.
Madelaine, the fact that no one has noticed the good padre is missing is very frustrating. ITA!
Carlos, I think you are in for a treat tonight as I suspect Maria will be putting on quite a show. From the little I saw in the preview, she looks great as a blonde.
NovelaMaven, thank you for making me forget the icy sleet outside. Your marvelous recap was indeed shelter from this storm.
Diana
Sandho truly doesn't stand a chance against Graceless. She is so cold she would take out an insurance policy on her own children and kill them for the payoff.
"The Goldfinch" won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction!
Fatima
Mil gracias for this marvelous recap! I loved the animal theme, your many wonderful asides, and the great grammar lessons. My favorite lines/observations had to be these:
Alejandro, that destroyer of manhood,
AND
But Pedro is not the only obsessive in our story.
In his dark cell, José Luis broods about Montserrat and Alejandro and scowls. (Actually, he broods about taunting Alejandro about Montserrat. Angélica who?)
So, so funny!
I didn't even get to watch this episode since I had an evening thing at work. It all sounds like a downer, though I'd like to see Basurto and Pedro's little dance.
Thanks again, NovelMaven. I have no doubt your recap is better than the episode itself
I only popped into this episode for a bit after getting home late, but did get to see a some of the Pedro-Zeke dance. Can't believe no shots were fired, but surely Adolfo is toast now!
The person with the knowledge holds the power, and right now Basurto knows more than even Pedro-- he knows Maria's location; he knows about the fake will/Pedro's plot; he knows who took the real will from Pedro; he knows about Vic and Nadia and their pregnancy; he knows about Pedro's narco ties and other crimes; and he knows the biggest secret of all-- Pedro's "condition", who he believes caused it, and the reason for his vendetta against Ale. Is Pedro sure he wants to leave him living? I guess good henchies are hard to find in Agua Azul.
Perhaps it's not Monse who JL is obsessed with, but Ale instead? He just thinks it's Monse. When was the last time he had a fantasy/daydream/thoughts that were just about his sweet moments with Monse-- not about deceiving Ale; sticking it to Ale; arguing with Ale; plotting with Ale; etc.?
JL is a sad case. He's a man without blood relations who would probably sell his soul for some and therefore doesn't know how to let go. If he thinks about it at all he envies Alejandro because despite having grown up poor Alejandro has hit a jackpot: Large inheritance, beautiful wife, healthy son, and a loving mother he thought he never had.
However, he also has the Suegra From Hell. That could cancel out the rest of it.
JL is going into self-pity mode now. First he lost Monserrat and then Angelica, so now he's taking the entire rap over the burned money. He's hiding from what is to come. It's entirely possible that this female officer is there to rescue him emotionally.
However, there is now the issue of the money he might inherit. Fabiolush and Graceless both have their eyes on it. He has both their numbers. He's safe from them as long as he's behind bars. He may know that on some unconscious level.
Something else occurred to me while writing that: Graceless seems to get as much or more pleasure from fleecing men out of money as she gets from spending it. Since this tale dwells more on the fleecing rather than the spending (We never see her shopping in expensive stores and she never pays her own restaurant bill) is it possible that she is acting out of some hostility in general toward wealthy men? Could that be because her own mother (a seamstress) was knocked up by a Dimitrio type 50+ years ago?
Well, Guess those who were detecting a bromance brewing between Pedro and Zeke really weren't so far off the mark after all. Who would have guessed both would have emerged unscathed after that setup? All that was missing was some torrid makeup sex.
I'm sure it will come as a surprise to some, but I'm disappointed at María's apparent career move. I prefer her more as a fresh-faced country girl in a peasant dress and bare feet. In the avances she looked... how can I say this without drawing snorts and snickers?... slutty... there... do with it what you will, but I think you know what I mean.
I do like that María has a trump card in her possession and I adore that headscarf look... the blond wig... not so much.
I'm really looking forward to Gracie's interrogation. It should be eye-opening for that judge.
Gee, that last scene was like watching a National Geographic special as the deadly snake approaches the quivering defenseless bunny.
Carlos
The problem with JL's depression is that if it's not about Monserrat he has no further reason to be in the story. The writers could keep him in the carcel until Pedro is fully exposed.
I still think there has to be some way, if we don't get a faast forward, to spring JL out of jail. He's worthless plot wise and if we just have to see him getting endless visitors and meandering through dream stages I'll be hitting the remote.
I frankly think it might be brilliant to use JL undercover. Spring him on some trumped up excuse and then have him portend to be sick of the system, turn from his good guy ways and start smoozing with the bad guys, all the while reporting back to his old boss. Would be interesting conflicts since no one can know and he will have a chance to do some real involvement in the plot. Otherwise, I agree with UA, what is he still around for?
Daisynjay
Now that the judge is calling in Graciela, I guess now Pedro will call in his favor for getting Dim out of jail. The only saving grace is that Pedro doesn't know the true identity of Fabs, and Macario and Angelica's mother do. A dna test between the two of them can prove his inheritance.
I gave to much credit to Adolfo. I should have known the plan was Maria's. She is much smarter, but crazy delusional. She and JL should start an "obsessive love" group.
Please remember:
WE ONLY DISCUSS WHAT WE HAVE ALL SEEN.
WE DON'T REFER TO WHAT HAS NOT YET HAPPENED, EVEN IN THE MOST GENERAL TERMS.
Thanks for understanding.
Thank you so much for your lovely comments today. I think we need to get the grammar stuff out of the way first, so here goes;
1. Thanks very much, anon, for pointing out that I had missed a "se" in this sentence, but I fixed it last night after I read your comment:
Y si no hubiera llegado a tiempo, ese cura se hubiera largado con muchísima información que hubiera llevado a todos a la cárcel.
Folks, the missing 'se' is important because it belongs to the verb, largar+se, the one we hear so often in the phrase: ¡Lárgate de mi casa!
With its 'reflexive' pronoun, it means 'leave' and is a synonym of 'irse.' 'Largar,' by itself, has other meanings which you can explore yourselves, if you are interested.
2. Emarie asked if this sentence includes a pluperfect subjunctive. The answer is yes, three actually:
si no hubiera llegado,
ese cura se hubiera largado
muchísima información que hubiera llevado a todos a la cárcel
How to pick them out of a crowd:
They are made up of the imperfect subjunctive of the helping verb 'haber' (hubiera, hubieras, hubiera, hubiéramos, hubieran -- and now and then, the 'hubiese' variant, just to keep us on our toes)
Plus the past participle of the main verb, in this case:
llegar --> hubiera llegado
largarse --> se hubiera largado
llevar --> hubiera llevado
I'll have to share my pluperfect subjunctive epiphany with you all at some other time. Right now I'm starting to bore myself (and that's saying something.)
Please let me know of any goof-ups in the above. I used to be pretty good at spotting my own typos, but not so much anymore.
I LOVE the animal themed recap. You caught the essence of each character's personality.
I have to agree with Urban,
"Nothing about this episode made sense."
I could not make hide nor hair of the plot, there was no evidence presented to suggest there even WAS a plot.
Adolfo seems to exchange personalities with Dimitrio, EZ, Maria, Pedro and any other human wandering about.
He should take Josefina's excellent advice and go find himself.
The grammar lesson was, as always, most appreciated.
And Graciela v. Sandro—well, I for one can't predict the outcome of that dogfight. Surely enough fur will fly for Gricela's hair extensions to loosen.
As to EZ having Pedro by the, em, air, I was shocked that he revealed nearly his whole playbook (except for the shenanigans with Maria and Anselmo). EZ is truly willing to risk everything on a very bad hand.
So many people have died recently that the show has really lost any plot thread it may have been clinging to.
Yikes!
Against, congratulations, NM on doing a great job of recapping a capitulo that made no sense. Those episodes are the hardest to capture in translation, as meaning is missing.
Elna June
I wonder if Victor shriveled when he he finally found out that he had gotten beat up by a Soprano (No, not Tony.)
I think the fact that we are so engaged in the story -- and have been since the beginning -- tells us that this is not another CI. I used to watch CI from time to time, waiting for it to morph into the something interesting. Instead it just got worse and worse. I never commented on it because, well, why kick a novela when it's down?
I agree that Adolfo is "a total dolt" for allowing María to manipulate him. I guess there's just something about the morena, huh? I don't know, I'm sure Carlos could explain it better.
Fatima, you are so kind. I can picture you standing back, appalled at the way the story is going, looking desperately for something nice to say. Fatima thought-bubbles: "I know! The section titles! And the grammar! That's the ticket!"
[snort]
You know I'm just teasing you, right? And Kipling's "The Jungle Book" wasn't far from my mind. You can read me like a...book.
Jarifa, although I'm not following Dallas in its latest version, I know just what you mean about getting hooked on "the goofy bizarre plot" even when the characters are mostly not that likable. Thanks for the nice words!
La Paloma, you cracked me up with this:
"It's a good thing we're not trying to learn legal procedures."
Interesting speculation about whether the real cause of Benjamín's death will come to light. It might not, if all they're looking at is DNA. But of course if they did find traces of poison, it would be used as evidence against Alejandro, as Urban points out. Oy vey.
Mads, I've also got my fingers crossed that Dim's change is for keeps. If it is, it opens the door to a future fresh start with Josefina.
I agree that the writers aren't giving the best lines to Montse and Ale right now. Maybe the actors are exhausted and need a little time to refuel. In the meantime, we've got old pros like Alexis Ayala to keep us awake.
Karen, yes, you're right. "Poor Refugio." The thing is, his reactions are always ridiculous. He is probably going to get "sensitized" the hard one. (I guess I still say "poor Monica" because there seem to be plenty of troglodytes on that base.)
Emarie, I hope I answered your grammar question.
You know, I think I've found "sangre fría" at the top levels of management in just about every organization I've worked for or been affiliated with.
It seems to me that SNL has done novela parodies, but not recently. Time to do them again!
Thank you so much, JudyB. I was amused by your reminding Fatima not to drop The Goldfinch on her foot. It reminded me of Ellen Degeneres' riff on the instructions on a shampoo bottle -- if you really need them, chances are 1) you can't read and/or 2) someone else is washing your hair. Tee hee.
...oof. yowww. Just dropped my Butt on my big toe. :)
Daisynjay, I always love reading your comments -- a sane, intelligent woman trying to do the impossible -- make sense out of the antics of a bunch of "numbskills" on the screen.
I'm intrigued by your question: Who DO we think Lt. Rentería will take to the ball? I rather like Diana's idea -- she looks like a good match for José Luis.
Maria in a blonde wig. Creepy. Because that’s so the main reason Ale loves Mons—her blonde hair.
I’m all for new lieutenant hooking up with JL.
Remember the Friends ep where they were all sitting around the TV watching a novela with two characters on the stairs fighting and they kept shouting to the screen “Push her down the stairs. Push her down the stairs.” And one of them did. Much cheering from the Friends gang.
OT: Fatima: if you don’t mind my asking, and please don’t hesitate to tell me you don’t want to answer, but what do you do to protect yourself from the negative energy that bombards you?
Nanette
Thank you for your gracious comment. I'm glad you raise the issue of EZ's withholding information from Pedro while pretending to wear his heart on his sleeve. EZ's ego does make him vulnerable, but last night he seemed to use his vulnerability brilliantly.
Julia R, if you promise not to tell Elna June, I'll confide to you that I thought the episode was pretty good. I loved it that so many actors got their time in the spotlight. But it was kind of hard to get your arms around thematically. Thanks so much for the kind words.
Vivi, what a great comment! I love your analysis of information as power and how at this point, the balance of power is with Ezequiel. I also agree completely about JL's obsession with Montse. I tried to hint at that in my description of his thoughts -- he wasn't reliving his time with either of the women he "loved"; he was reliving flinging his deflowering of Montserrat in Alejandro's face.
I've always thought the most important relationships in this story tend to be between men: JL and Refugio, JL and Alejandro, EZ and Pedro, Dim and Adolfo. Who else?
Carlos, It is actually tonight's episode that I felt was dedicated to you. In a few hours, we'll see if Julia R. agrees. But I am always aware of you on The Patio when I write my recaps. In a sense, EVERY NM recap is dedicated to, as Mads would say, y'all.
I am glad to know you have your standards and do draw the line somewhere (if not at attempted murder, then at fashion crimes).
[What this show needs is a funny looking little dog with a double-entendre name. Heh heh.]
Carvivlie, Thanks for reminding us that Pedro still has Dimitrio's secret in his pocket and may use that to manipulate Graciela.
And thanks for remembering the SNL skit. Was it the one where her opening monologue was all about her generous trasero?
Elna June:
"Adolfo seems to exchange personalities with Dimitrio, EZ, Maria, Pedro and any other human wandering about."
I love this observation. He is so empty, so conditional, so situational. (And perhaps very soon, so dead?)
Before I write a word of a recap, I always try to think about what just happened: was there a unifying narrative? how does it tie into the whole story? Some episodes are clearly dominated by theme (usually loss of some kind). Others, like this one, careen along in a a way that is often entertaining to watch but hard to capture. So I just threw up my hands and said "It's a zoo around here!" heehee.
Oxnard Huero, you're killing me with the castrati jokes. I'm touched by your continued concern for poor Victor's feelings. Perhaps you won't have to worry about him for very much longer.
Hey Vivi, thanks for the detective work. I guess whenever they have a good-looking latino or latina hosting, the writers churn out a novela parody. (That's probably not as easy as it sounds. It's hard to parody a form that is already kind of an over-the-top self parody.) Anyway, I'm going to check out your links when I get a chance. Thanks!
Nanette,
"Remember the Friends ep where they were all sitting around the TV watching a novela with two characters on the stairs fighting and they kept shouting to the screen “Push her down the stairs. Push her down the stairs.” And one of them did. Much cheering from the Friends gang."
Hey! That's us! That's us on The Patio!
Hahaha!
the motorcycle accident which took Pedro out of the ballgame
Basurto switches off the computer screen (The N & V Show grows tedious very quickly). Amen!
Apparently he hasn't heard: Pedro doesn't validate.
I have to give props to Victor. He just got the stuffing beat out of him, but is already back to studly duty. And the previews show him strolling into La Escondida. What exactly does it take for him to feel a since of urgency to flee the hell out of town?
It is sort of a I would have done it idea, right?
VIvi, thanks so much for the links to SNL spoofs, my husband and I had a good chuckle.
I think it is EZ who is toast-as well as Nadia, Nadia was told by Pedro that he'd kill her if she revealed the secret to anyone, and EZ is in danger just by knowing it.
I really can't figure out what they are doing; they seem to be turning over all the cast and yet they will continue this story through July?
Carlos
Carlos, maybe there's a parrot in the new joint. That would class it up, right?
Emarie, the pluperfect subjunctive is made up of the IMPERFECT SUBJUNCTIVE OF HABER + THE PAST PARTICIPLE OF THE MAIN VERB.
si yo hubiera comido = if I had eaten
The exact meaning really depends on how it's used in a sentence.
It's easy to translate it when it's in the IF part of and IF ... THEN.... sentence. Then it means "If SOMEONE had X'd..."
But it can also occur in the THEN part of a sentence like this and mean something like "then SOMEONE/SOMETHING WOULD HAVE Y'd."
Those are only two of the many ways the construction can be used. The translation depends on the meaning of the whole thought, not just the two isolated words (hubiera llegado, etc).
I hope that makes some kind of sense. :)
Gracias amiga. Awesome recap, and thanks for the fun theme. They are a bunch of animals. I am out of time, but I had to say I appreciate your work and dedication to the caraycaray community. Thank You!
Back to work...hasta pronto!
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