El Encargado 2 Temporada › [ Official ]

Season 1 was a perfect closed loop. Season 2 risks feeling redundant, but the writers cleverly pivot from "Can he keep the job?" to "What happens when the lies catch up?" The tone shifts slightly from tragicomedy to a tense psychological thriller.

Eliseo has successfully manipulated the board to keep his job, but the victory is hollow. The building is now under a microscope. The owners are paranoid, the police are sniffing around, and a mysterious new tenant has arrived who isn't afraid of his intimidation tactics. What’s New in Season 2? The second season expands the universe without losing the claustrophobic tension that made the first season great. Here are the key upgrades: 1. The Legal Labyrinth Season 1 was about keeping the job. Season 2 is about surviving the consequences. Eliseo finds himself trapped in a web of lawsuits, audits, and backstabbing board meetings. The stakes shift from social power to literal freedom. 2. A Worthy Adversary The best addition to the cast is the new character “The Architect” (played by the brilliant Gabriel Goity ). Unlike the weak previous board president, The Architect sees right through Eliseo’s "humble servant" act. Their verbal duels are the highlight of the season—two stubborn old men playing chess with people’s lives. 3. The Return of "El Chino" One of the fan-favorite subplots involves the return of Eliseo’s son, "El Chino" (Pompeyo Audivert). Their toxic, co-dependent relationship is explored deeper here. You will laugh at their absurd fights, but you will also cringe at the psychological damage on display. Why You Should Watch (Even if you skipped Season 1) While you can watch Season 2 as a standalone, it is highly recommended you watch Season 1 first. The show relies on the slow burn of Eliseo’s accumulated sins. El Encargado 2 Temporada

If you thought the first season of El Encargado (known internationally as The Boss or The One in Charge ) was a tense ride through the corridors of a crumbling building, hold onto your master keys. The Argentine dark comedy-drama starring Guillermo Francella is back, and Season 2 proves that absolute power doesn’t just corrupt—it leaks, creaks, and files lawsuits. Season 1 was a perfect closed loop