Los 80
Los 80 was a Chilean drama TV series for Canal 13 produced to celebrate the Bicentennial of Chile,[1] starring Daniel Muñoz, Tamara Acosta, Daniel Alcaíno, Loreto Aravena, Tomás Verdejo and Lucas Escobar. Although it is clearly inspired by the Spanish series Cuéntame cómo pasó,[2] focusing on the events in Chile,[3] it is not an official remake.[4] The series was renewed for a seventh and last season that aired in Spring-Summer 2014.
Los 80 | |
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![]() Los 80 intertitle | |
Created by | Boris Quercia |
Starring | Daniel Muñoz Tamara Acosta Daniel Alcaíno Loreto Aravena Tomás Verdejo Lucas Bolvarán Katty Kowaleczko |
Opening theme | "El Tiempo en las Bastillas" |
Country of origin | Chile |
Original language | Spanish |
No. of seasons | 7 |
No. of episodes | 78 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Alberto Gesswein Patricio Pereira |
Production locations | Santiago, Chile |
Running time | 54 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | Canal 13 |
Picture format | SDTV, HDTV |
Original release | October 12, 2008 – December 21, 2014 |
Plot
The series, starring Daniel Muñoz and Tamara Acosta, tells the story of the Herreras, a middle-class family living in Santiago of Chile. The plot is set between 1982 and 1989, in the military dictatorship, and revolves around historical events during the 80's, especially the economic crisis of 1982 and the 8.0 magnitude earthquake in Santiago.
Main cast
- Daniel Muñoz as Juan Herrera González
- Tamara Acosta as Ana López Matamala
- Loreto Aravena as Claudia Herrera López
- Tomás Verdejo as Martín Herrera López
- Lucas Bolvarán as Félix Herrera López
- Daniel Alcaíno as Exequiel Pacheco
- Katty Kowaleczko as Nancy Morales
- Fernando Farías as Don Genaro Manrique
- Diego Navarrete as Hugo "Petita" Manrique
- Pablo Freire as Bruno Mora
Supporting cast
- Carmen Disa Gutiérrez as Luz Matamala, mather of Ana
- Jorge Yáñez as Ramiro López, father of Ana
- Max Corvalán as Padre Renato, chief teacher of Félix y Bruno
- Gabriela Medina as Doña Imelda
- Cristóbal Alofa as Denin Gallardo
- Natalie Dujovne as Susana
- Víctor Rojas as Padre Enrique, chief teacher of Martín
- Francisco Rodríguez as Francisco Silva, boyfriend of Claudia
- Benito Quercia as Farid Assad, boss of Juan
- Raimundo Guzmán as Diego Rojas, friend of Martín
- Mario Soto as TV saler
- Francisco Ossa as Lieutenant of Martín
- Jaime Artus as Cristián Plaza, friend of Martín
- Mario Horton as Gabriel Díaz
- María José Bello as Sandra González, friend of Claudia
- Irene Medina as Pauli, friend of Claudia
- Mario Santander as Ana's gynecologist
- Ernesto Anacona as "Chino", friend of Martín
- Catalina Martin as Pamela "Negra", girlfriend of "Chino"
- Ramón Llao as Manuel, pool saloon owner
- Berta Lasala as Mónica Miranda
- María Ester Mesina as mrs Marta
- Emilia Lara as Paola
- Franco Meershon as Mauricio, boyfriend of Claudia
- Catherine Mazoyer as Gloria, boss of Ana y Nancy
- Heidrun Breier as Madre Teresa, teacher of Félix and Bruno
- Manuel Peña as Roberto Fuenzalida, father of Bruno
- Álvaro Viguera as Fernando Tapia, friend of Gabriel
- Benjamín Velásquez as Nelson, friend of Félix
- Feofrica Larraín as Paty, classmate of Félix
- Otilio Castro as Pedro Herrera Jr. / Agent Tapia
- Gregory Cohen as Óscar Contardo, medic who helps Claudia
- Cristóbal Muhr as Rucio, friend of Gabriel
- Mauricio Pitta as CNI Agent
- Francisco González as CNI Agent
- Carolina Paulsen as Secretary of la Vicaria of la Solidaridad'
- Diego Casanueva as Gonzalo, friend of Paola and Martín
- Patricia Pardo as Enriqueta Amunátegui, mother of Paola
- Francisca Castillo as Teresa, mother of Camila and Paulina
- Karina Santoro as Camila von Hummel
- Antonia Zilleruelo as Paulina von Hummel
- Benjamín Velásquez as Nelson, friend of Félix
- Carlos Belmar as Pereira, friend of Félix
- Gonzalo Robles as Ricardo Assad
- Nicolás Saavedra as Néstor Díaz
- Constanza Rojas as Sybilla
- María Ester Mesina as Mrs Marta
- Gustavo Becerra as Lucho, maestro
- Edinson Díaz as Miguel, maestro
- María José Bello as Sandra González, friend of Claudia
- Juan Pablo Larenas as Cristóbal, workmate of Martín
- Karina Santoro as Camila von Hummel
- Javier Castillo as Daniel, boyfriend of Camila
- Néstor Cantillana as Mateo González
- Iván Álvarez of Araya as Luciano Acuña
- Sergio Piña as Don Roberto Cifuentes, boss of Juan
- Paulo Meza as Riquelme, workmate of Juan
- Erto Pantoja as Soto, workmate Juan
- Claudia Cabezas as Laura, workmate of Ana y Nancy
- Nathalia Aragonese as Gloria, former lover of Exequiel
- Verónica Soffia as Macarena Tagle
- Carolina Arredondo as Erika Rojas
- Sebastián Arrigorriaga as Félix (2014)
- Daniela Ramírez as Sybilla (2014)
- Amaya Forch as Alejandra Hurtado
- Alejandro Trejo as Milton, neighborhood barber
- Iván Álvarez of Araya as Luciano Acuña
- Lux Pascal as Felipe "Axel" Müller
- Luna Martínez as Susy, friend of Axl
- Rocío Toscano as Ximena, friend of Axl
Development
The first season of the series premiered on October 12, 2008. In this first season, the story is set between 1982 and 1983, starting with Chile's qualification for the 1982 FIFA World Cup, thanks to soccer player Carlos Caszely, and finishing with the first national protest against Augusto Pinochet.
The second season premiered on October 18, 2009. This time, the story is set between 1983 and 1984, starting with a moment that changes the life of the Herrera family, the news of a new baby, and finishing with the birth of baby Ana.
The third season of the series premiered on October 17, 2010 and ended on December 19. Set in 1985, it starts with the 1985 Algarrobo earthquake and ends with Claudia's decision to leave her family, because she's being investigated by the CNI.
The fourth season of the series premiered on October 16, 2011. Set in 1986, it starts with the Herreras reading the goodbye letter Claudia left and Juan going to Argentina to see her. The season finished on December 20, 2011 with Pedro (CNI agent) torturing Claudia, Gabriel (Claudia's boyfriend) being shot and killed by CNI agents, and Claudia finally returning to her home and hugging her mother.
The fifth season of the series premiered on September 23, 2012. The year is 1987, and it starts with Pope John Paul II's visit to Chile. The fifth season ended on December 16, 2012 with Juan trying to get a job after Ricardo, the son of his former employer, steals all the money Juan and him made from selling a textile factory. Claudia, recovering from Gabriel's death, tries to go back to medical school, repeating again the PAA (Chilean MCAT). In the meantime, Felix has his first kiss with Sibila.
The sixth season premiered on October 13, 2013. It focuses on 1988's plebiscite of 1988 and the end of Pinochet's dictatorship. The season's finale took place on January 12, 2014.
Finally, in August 2014, Canal 13 announced the seventh season of the series, based on the year 1989, which began to be issued from October 5 and will mark the end of the series. The recordings were completed on Tuesday November 18, 2014, amid tears and hugs.[5]
Chilean television ratings
The pilot episode attracted 2.06 million viewers in Chile, came first in its time slot, leaving behind other programs like Animal Nocturno in the "competitive Sunday night". The season marked a peak audience of 2.7 million and an average rating, in 10 episodes, of 1.9 million viewers.[6] Los 80 was the most watched new series in 2008, averaging a total of 1.92 million viewers.
For the second season, the show continued in the "competitive Sunday night", against Animal Nocturno from TVN and Caiga Quien Caiga from Megavisión, leading the night with a positive margin of 0.7 million viewers. The series popularity increased, and it started having a big cultural impact in people. The season's audience average was 2.54 million viewers. The season had an average rating of 2.54 million viewers. The most watched episode of the season was the season's finale "Nos queremos tanto".
For the third season, the series still led the Sunday nights and became the most watched show of the year, with 2.67 million viewers, winning awards like TV Grama Award and the Copihue de Oro. The season finale attracted 3.2 million viewers. The season's most watched episode was "Familia", the season finale, with an average of 3.25 million viewers and a peak audience of 4.3 million viewers. This season transformed Los 80 in the most watched TV show in Chile.
The fourth season increased the popularity of the series even more. This was the most watched season of the series and the most watched show of the year again, averaging a total of 2.98 million viewers, winning more awards like APES Award, Copihue de Oro and TV Grama again. The season's finale "Cuando solo nos queda rezar" had an average of 3.4 million viewers, with a peak audience of 4.4 million viewers. The season's most watched episode was "Madres coraje", which had an average of 3.46 million viewers, making it also the most watched episode of the whole series. This season had an average of 2.98 million viewers, and it was both the most watched season of the series and the most watched TV show in 2011.
For the fifth season, a new time slot led to a decline in the show's popularity and to a decrease in viewers, but the show continued leading the Sunday nights. The season's premiere attracted 2.96 million viewers, and was the lead-out to Pareja Perfecta, which attracted 2.51 million viewers that night. The season's finale attracted 2.61 million viewers, and the season's average was 2.58 million viewers, with a total of 12 episodes. The season's finale "El día más feliz de mi vida" ("The happiest day of my life") had an average of 2.61 million viewers and a peak audience of 3.4 million viewers. The season most watched episode was "Y nada más", which had an average of 3.07 million viewers. The season had an average of 2.58 million viewers.
Season | Episodes | Timeslot | Season premiere | Season finale | TV season | Viewers (millions) |
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Los 80 (season 1) | 10 | Sunday 10:30 pm | October 12, 2008 | December 21, 2008 | 2008 | 1.92 |
Los 80 (season 2) | 10 | Sunday 10:30 pm | October 18, 2009 | December 27, 2009 | 2009 | 2.54 |
Los 80 (season 3) | 10 | Sunday 10:30 pm | October 17, 2010 | December 19, 2010 | 2010 | 2.67 |
Los 80 (season 4) | 11 | Sunday 10:30 pm | October 16, 2011 | December 20, 2011 | 2011 | 2.98 |
Los 80 (season 5) | 12 | Sunday 10 pm | September 23, 2012 | December 16, 2012 | 2012 | 2.58 |
Los 80 (season 6) | 12 | Sunday 10 pm | October 13, 2013 | January 12, 2014 | 2013 | 2.28 |
Los 80 (season 7) | 13 | Sunday 10 pm | Octubre 5, 2014 | December 21, 2014 | 2014 | TBA |
References
- "La serie ochentera del bicentenario que prepara el gurú del cine popular". Terra. January 29, 2008. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
- Molina Jara, Jorge; Espinoza Guzmán, Alejandro (29 December 2019). "¿Por qué vuelve Los 80? Hipótesis de un regreso". El Mostrador.
- "La serie 'Los 80' en canal 13". Diario Crítico de Chile. October 12, 2008. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
- "International remakes of 'Cuéntame cómo pasó'". formulatv.com (in Spanish). 13 September 2017. Retrieved February 25, 2021.
- "Lágrimas y abrazos marcaron último día de grabación de Los 80". Radio Bio Bio. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- "Los 80 finaliza primera temporada, anuncia DVD y regreso el 2009". La Factoria. December 22, 2008. Archived from the original on March 17, 2010. Retrieved October 3, 2010.