Baby Bandito Season 2 Review
Director: Pepa San Martín
Date Created: 2025-10-23 02:22
2.5
Baby Bandito Season 2 Review: In this Season, the crazy world of Kevin and his gang comes back with the same thrill of burglaries, treasons, and insane schemes, but this time the charm seems somewhat diminished. Under the direction of Pepa San Martín, this Chilean series features Nicolás Contreras as Kevin, Francisca Armstrong as Génesis, Carmen Zabala as Mística, Mauricio Pesutic as Amador and others. Comprising 8 episodes, each 40 minutes long, the season resumes right where the first one ends, and Kevin gets pulled once again into a game of money, vengeance, and survival.
Baby Bandito Season 2 Review
Kevin’s motivation this time in Season 2 of Baby Bandito is of the emotional kind. His own mother, Ana, just so happens to be terminally ill, and his desire to bring peace for her induces him to place yet another gigantic wager, reclaiming the stolen money back from the powerful Butcher family. They seek to mix crime and loyalty alongside family bonds, but where the emotional effect doesn’t always come through, it falls short. For as much as I liked the intent of the plotline, all of it played halfway for me, and the remainder of the time infuriated me.
Netflix’s first season of Baby Bandito took the flashy, new-age aesthetic, youthful bandits evading menacing thugs by their wits. This second season, however, aims to be darker and grittier, and it adds family politics to the crime-by-heist premise. That doesn’t seem like a bad premise by any means, but the execution becomes unnecessarily convoluted. Each episode just adds another twist, betrayal, or emotional collapse, and the story becomes increasingly fractured and thus increasingly difficult to become immersed in.

It centres on Kevin smuggling the loot back from the Butchers, all the while keeping the family covered, but there’s too much plot deadweight to compete for attention: Mistica’s increasing leadership, Axel’s revenge scheme, Natalia’s frenzy, and even the Russian thug’s bizarre metamorphosis. I sensed the authors were trying to have all loose ends, but did so by confusing the plot.
But I’m not going to lie, there are moments which still work. You have some of those strong emotional scenes between Kevin and his mom, where I personally stopped and thought. That ethical premise of “money can’t buy peace” throughout the whole season was my favourite. You’ll always have some muddled or breakneck scene immediately subsequent to every emotional one, though.

Baby Bandito: Temporada 2 acting is among the stronger aspects. Nicolás Contreras once again gives Kevin a believable mix of courage and shame. His face does much of the acting most of the time, conveying far more than the script does. Carmen Zabala, too, as Mistica, is superb; those scenes where she appears are effective, by and large, because of her own self-assurance, emotional pitch, and screen presence.
But some of the characters, like Natalia and Axel, are defined by extremes. They are cold and dangerous one moment and unpredictable or cartoon-like the next. Made it difficult for me to become fully immersed in their disputes. I also felt like Génesis, my key emotional hook of the premiere, was put to the side this time. Her interaction with Kevin would have brought us much-needed heart, but the plot instead swings back and forth repeatedly between side plots.
With the flair of Pepa San Martín and razor-like direction, the camera, lights, and cuts make the production of the Netflix series Baby Bandito Season 2 worthy of the big screen. Neon-lit streets and shadowy shelters of the Chilean backdrop remain colourful and energetic. Scenarios of vibrant visuals by themselves, though, are insufficient to make up for weak plots.

The series also has an erratically paced flow, by the way. They trudge through the early episodes, and they all gather together for the finale. By the finale, there is another betrayal, another gunfight, and another poignant good-bye. That’s too much déja vu of Season 1, this time minus the thrill.
If there’s one thing I liked about Season 2 of Baby Bandito, it’s how the story reminds us that chasing money can destroy people from the inside. Almost every character, from Kevin to the Russian, ends up realising that greed brings nothing but pain. The ending, where the money literally burns to ashes, drives home that message in a bold way.

Even the strong episode, however, was not able to make up for the inconsistency. It does feel the emotional statement gets stretched too much, as the producers wanted us to feel sympathetic all but did not have the arcs strong enough. In the finale, I already knew where the show would go, but emotionally, I was not moved, and this was where it failed to keep me.
Netflix Baby Bandito Season 2 Review: Summing Up
Netflix’s Baby Bandito Season 2 is ambitious but inconsistent, stylish but emotionally hollow. While I appreciate the effort to give Kevin and his gang more depth, the writing often slips into melodrama. The action scenes are fine, the music adds flair, but the heart of the story gets lost in chaos. I didn’t hate it, but I didn’t love it either; it sits somewhere in between, like a half-finished plan that needed one more rewrite.
