EZ's past continues to haunt him, but present horrors give him a new perspective.EZ's past continues to haunt him, but present horrors give him a new perspective.EZ's past continues to haunt him, but present horrors give him a new perspective.
Vincent Vargas
- Gilberto 'Gilly' Lopez
- (as Vincent 'Rocco' Vargas)
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia"Failure to report a kidnapping" is not specifically a federal crime. It falls under the umbrella of Title 18 Section 4 of the United States Code (USC) , Misprision of a Felony. "Whoever, having knowledge of the actual commission of a felony cognizable by a court of the United States, conceals and does not as soon as possible make known the same to some judge or other person in civil or military authority under the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both."
Featured review
The Aftermath of Sheer Devastation
The previous episode of MAYANS features some of the most shocking violence you will ever see on television. And it's only natural that this episode mostly deals with the aftermath. Nevertheless, it's a classic in its own right. Tough biker, (and Iraq War vet) Johnny "Coco" Cruz has a speech that lasts for a good five minutes where he literally explains the entire meaning of life to Club Prospect Ezekiel "EZ" Reyes. And he does it while sitting over the corpse of his own murdered mother. This should be a joke on so many levels, but the writers nailed the dialogue and the guy who plays Coco completely sells it as hard-won wisdom instead of cheap serial-killer rationalizations. If only the episode could have ended there!
Unfortunately, the weakest character in all of Season One, Super Duper Secret Agent Lincoln Potter, hogs up most of the rest of the episode. This Ray McKinnon guy is a terrible actor -- it's like's channeling a smarmy, precious Donald Sutherland trying to play a corrupt bureaucrat who thinks he's Oscar Wilde. Sooo many witticisms that just fall flat. And the WASP mannerisms that are so broad and so patronizing. At one point Danny Pino, as Galindo the tough drug lord, literally looks at him and says, "yes, uh, that's very profound. Could we move on now?" And it doesn't feel like the character is annoyed, it's the actor showing annoyance with the other guy's mannered performance.
But still . . . that speech about the meaning of life. Coco for President!!
Unfortunately, the weakest character in all of Season One, Super Duper Secret Agent Lincoln Potter, hogs up most of the rest of the episode. This Ray McKinnon guy is a terrible actor -- it's like's channeling a smarmy, precious Donald Sutherland trying to play a corrupt bureaucrat who thinks he's Oscar Wilde. Sooo many witticisms that just fall flat. And the WASP mannerisms that are so broad and so patronizing. At one point Danny Pino, as Galindo the tough drug lord, literally looks at him and says, "yes, uh, that's very profound. Could we move on now?" And it doesn't feel like the character is annoyed, it's the actor showing annoyance with the other guy's mannered performance.
But still . . . that speech about the meaning of life. Coco for President!!
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- Dan1863Sickles
- Dec 11, 2019
Details
- Runtime1 hour 4 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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