Carlos (2010)

TV show · 2010 · Drama, Crime, War & Politics · French

Curator score: 6.1/10 (15.1K ratings)

Overview

The story of the Venezuelan Ilich Ramirez Sanchez known as "Carlos", who was, for almost twenty years, one of the most wanted terrorists in the world.

Ratings

Created by

Olivier Assayas

Production

Film en Stock, Egoli Tossell Film, Canal+, ARTE France Cinéma

Cast

Edgar Ramírez, Alexander Scheer, Nora Waldstätten, Alejandro Arroyo, Ahmad Kaabour, Talal Jurdi, Juana Acosta, Christoph Bach, Rodney El Haddad, Julia Hummer, Antoine Balabane, Aljoscha Stadelmann, Zeid Hamdan

Curator Review

Verdict

A propulsive, globe-trotting political crime epic that treats its subject as a historical force rather than a simple biopic. Long, dense, and morally chilly, it rewards viewers who like serious, procedural storytelling with a strong sense of era and geopolitical texture.

Best for

  • Viewers who like ambitious historical crime dramas
  • Fans of political thrillers with an international scope
  • People comfortable with long runtimes and a patient, episodic structure
  • Viewers interested in 1970s-1990s radical politics and espionage

Skip if

  • You want a fast, compact watch
  • You prefer clear-cut heroes and villains
  • You dislike subtitles or multilingual storytelling
  • You want a character study with emotional warmth

Overview

Carlos is one of the more formidable European crime dramas of its era: rigorous, unsentimental, and unusually expansive in how it maps ideology, violence, and celebrity onto a single life. Edgar Ramírez gives the title figure a slippery, charismatic presence that never fully settles into either myth or condemnation, which is exactly the point.

Worth noting

The series works best as a historical sweep, moving through shifting political climates, intelligence networks, and terrorist factions with a near-documentary confidence. It can feel deliberately impersonal, but that coolness is part of its power; the show is less interested in psychology than in the machinery that allowed Carlos to become an international symbol.

Bottom line

Because it was originally conceived as a long-form feature, the pacing is patient and sometimes austere, but the result is absorbing if you like prestige crime storytelling that trusts the audience to keep up. It remains especially strong as a one-and-done limited series: complete, serious, and memorable rather than binge-friendly in a lightweight sense.

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Topics

political thriller, historical drama, crime epic, biographical, international, 1970s, 1980s, prestige, slow-burn, limited series

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