The Five Juanas season 1 Kiss Scene - Valentina and Fede

🙏 Please LIKE And SUBSCRIBE. Netflix loves to release their soap operas, but The Five Juanas is not overindulging as much as previous releases, stretching only at 18 episodes, which is still against the new norm of eight to ten. However, this is an immediately compelling story where viewers will be tempted to binge from the offset. Subscribe to Kino book on Youtube for more The Five Juanas season 1 scenes! The Five Juanas imagines a group of women who end up at a hotel in Cancun, all for varied reasons, ranging from crime to life crises. Each woman has a unique birthmark on their butt (which feels like any excuse to have plenty of shots from behind), indicating that they are all related and from the same family. By pure, dramatic, and comical coincidence, after a brief earthquake, the five women all discover they have the same birthmark and same name. It’s a storyline that is difficult to believe but compelling enough to keep you grounded. Netflix’s The Five Juanas season 1 The Five Juanas 1x01 Valentina and Fede And so, the Netflix series navigates five beautiful women through a conspiracy, triggering DNA tests and the voyage for the truth. Who are their parents? Why do they have identical birthmarks? Why were all five of them separated? I find the last question equally impressive — splitting up five children is not an easy feat. The five leading women all have their unique personalities, allowing a mismatch of sisterhood and doubt. The Five Juanas is the latest Netflix release that spins a dark tale surrounding five women who are on a hunt to unveil the biggest secret that ties their lives together. A suspenseful thriller that gives you new clues and information at every fold, the series is the adaptation of the Mexican drama by Bernando Romero Pereiro’s Colombian telenovela Las Juanas de 1997 and Hijas de la luna. Juanita Arias, Sofia Engberg, Oka Giner, Renata Notni, Zuria Vega all star in the lead roles in this Netflix series. The show is 18-episode long, with a runtime for each episode ranging from somewhere around 30 minutes to 50 minutes that always keeps you at the edge of your seat. The premise essentially revolves around the lives of five women named Juana who discover that they share the same birthmark all in the shape of a fish, hinting towards the fact that they are related. This sets the story rolling as the five Juanas begin a journey to discover the mysteries that have been kept buried long enough under the web of tragic lies by filthy politicians. The first episode introduces us to our five, very different heroines. We have always-in-trouble and feisty stripper Juana Manuela (Manny), scared and confused singer Juana Matilde (Matilde), the girl-next-door mind clairvoyant Juana Bautista (Bautista), the sweet but wilful nun-in-training Juana Caridad (Caridad) and the headstrong investigative journalist Juana Valentina (Valentina/Val) who cross paths by the end of the first episode. The creators try to put forward a feminist message about how women are used at all turns and crosses by men, who never take responsibility or accountability for their actions. It focuses on the shoulders of our female protagonists’ to tell the story of a woman living in a man’s world, always crushed and tortured, mostly revolving around the aspects of abuse, and violence against women.