Stuart T
So dumb! So Great! Totally addicting
Rated 5/5 Stars •
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
07/06/23
Full Review
amallia
Elite season 1,2,3 are the best
Rated 5/5 Stars •
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
05/05/23
Full Review
Extremelly impressive teen detective drama series about Spanish high-school, with a lot of puzzles and riddles. When you watch it, you can deepen in touching and thrilling plot and dwell these intriguing circumstances with very realistic characters. They try to find the killer and ruin his life, coping with their own problems at the same time.
Its gripping, fast-moving scenes, incredible and catchy characters with their personal stories make me totally amazed. My favs are Lu, Ander and Rebe. I think I have a lot in common with them and they really inspire me to achieve my goals.
I advise watching "Elite" to teens who want to take part in absorbing investigation and have new memorable emotions.
Rated 5/5 Stars •
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
12/06/22
Full Review
Alan A
Elite is a must-watch. Season one is just, next level awesome.
Rated 5/5 Stars •
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
08/15/22
Full Review
Audience Member
Idiosyncratic notion: A+. Of the relative multitude of ongoing increases to the class, "Elite", a Netflix Spanish import, might be the most awesome of the bundle. The series succeeds by making engaging characters that really carry on like children, not cheeky twenty-somethings. Certainly, the entertainers are most certainly more seasoned than their teen on-screen personas, yet the composition is so damn great that it's barely noticeable. "Elite" focuses on the best secondary school in Spain, "Las Encinas," where rich children go to get seen by the world's top colleges. The story gets fascinating when three understudies from common families—Samuel, Nadia, and Christian—join the youthful rich researchers after their outdated is obliterated by a quake. Gracious, no doubt, and there's likewise a homicide secret that should be addressed. What truly makes "Elite" stand apart from its partners is the serious areas of strength in the turn of events, masterfully dealt with by co-makers Daro Madrona and Carlos Montero. Take Guzman, for example, played by the neat and gifted Miguel Bernardeau. From the beginning, he's your run of the mill, favored secondary school menace, never going to budge on making the three new transfers' day-to-day routines an experience bad dream. However, the authors insightfully furnish Guzman with his own special account that hints at recovery as the season advances. Menaces, as a rule, don't get fresh opportunities, and the secretive outcast is the person who gets the young lady toward the end of the story-not here. Indeed, even the disappointed rookies, similar to Samuel and Christian, have their hazier sides. Nobody is a miscreant or a legend for an extremely long time. Similar to HBO's famous dream series, "Game of Thrones", "Elite" loves to investigate moral uncertainty while outside powers, similar to street pharmacists and controlling guardians, begin to go after the disturbed adolescents. Thus, about that murder secret. Without ruining anything, we should simply say the wrongdoing is a point of convergence for the general story, yet not really an essential one. Several episodes begin and end with a cross examination scene between one of the understudies and the directing criminal investigator, relating the events leading up to the murder. The scenes do have moments of anticipation, but they generally fall short due to the punch presented by the finished lives of the understudies before the wrongdoing occurs. On par with what "Elite" is, it's not completely unique, taking topics from other well-known titles that have preceded it, like "Gossip Girl", "Mean Girls", and "The OC", among others. Guzman's better half, Lu, is the embodiment of the exemplary Queen Bee. The Mexican-conceived entertainer Danna Paola depicts her impeccably as a hot, aggressive young lady whom every last one of her cohorts detests, yet in addition, worships. Her circular segment takes the longest to grow, yet toward the end of the time, you might have an alternate assessment of her personality.
Rated 5/5 Stars •
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
01/09/23
Full Review
Audience Member
Unexpectedly Fantastic. Gripping twists galore
Rated 5/5 Stars •
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
01/09/23
Full Review
Read all reviews
Episode 1
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Welcome
After a public high school collapses, the builder tries to repair its image by paying for three impacted students to attend an exclusive private school.
Details
Episode 2
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Desire
A school project brings Marina and Samuel closer and inspires Guzmán to try and win over Nadia; Christian is shocked by a revelation.
Details
Episode 3
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Saturday Night
Samuel throws a party, where Nano makes a move on Marina and spiked punch affects more than one couple; Nadia is hurt by what she learns about Guzmán.
Details
Episode 4
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Love is a Drug
Guzmán tries to earn Nadia's forgiveness; Polo and Christian bond at a gala; Lu bribes her teacher; to pay his debt, Nano must complete a dark mission.
Details
Episode 5
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Everyone Lies
Marina gives Nano a way to pay his debt; Lu intentionally leaks a secret in front of Nadia; Omar learns Ander told his friends about the two of them.
Details
Episode 6
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Everybody Will Be Okay
Nano learns one watch holds a secret; Marina's pot stash is found; news of a pregnancy raises suspicions; Christian is offered fame if he does a favor.
Details
Episode 7
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Everything Explodes
Carla suspects Marina is involved in the theft; Omar's father makes plans for his son; after learning his sister's secret, Guzmán seeks revenge.
Details
Episode 8
Aired Oct 5, 2018
Assilah
The last moments before the murder unfold; Christian makes a tough decision; the police arrest a suspect; Guzmán becomes reckless with grief.
Details