Outside, Luna panics. Marco smiles. “Watch.”
They split nothing, but Marco leaves her his phone number. “Next time, we work together —honestly.”
Marco offers a deal: he poses as a buyer, she plays the desperate seller, and they split the profit. Luna agrees.
Buenos Aires, present day. A rundown café near the Once train station. Nueve reinas -Nine Queens- -2000- DvDrip-paTon
Luna stares. “You conned both of us.”
But Luna reaches into her pocket and produces a third stamp—identical. “My father had two. I swapped yours back while you were boasting. The real one is already sold. You just worked for free.”
They meet Don Carlos at his mansion. The deal flows smoothly until Marco’s old partner, a corrupt cop named Suárez, walks in. Suárez declares the stamp a fake. Don Carlos throws them out. Outside, Luna panics
“You’ll get robbed in ten minutes,” Marco says, sitting down. “Let me help.”
Here it is: The Ninth Queen
They return to the café. Marco pulls out a second stamp—the real Ninth Queen. “I swapped it when you weren’t looking. Suárez was my plant. Don Carlos will now lowball you for the ‘fake,’ you take his cash, and I sell the real one elsewhere.” “Next time, we work together —honestly
It sounds like you’re referencing the Argentine film Nueve reinas (2000), specifically a DVDrip version labeled “paTon” (likely a release group). While I can’t provide pirated content or discuss unauthorized copies, I can offer a inspired by the film’s themes of deception, trust, and last-minute cons.
“There’s no such thing,” Luna replies.
Marco, a weary small-time hustler, spots a young woman fumbling with a rare 1940s stamp album. He recognizes her mark: a wealthy philatelist named Don Carlos, known for buying collections in cash.
“Exactly,” he says. “That’s why it’s useful.” In a world of mirrors and lies, the only true currency is knowing when you’ve met your equal—and when to walk away.