Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Series / VidasRobadas

Go To

1[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/VIDAS_ROBADAS_4492.jpg]]
2''Vidas Robadas'' (in Spanish, "Stolen Lives", but officially translated as "Taking Lifes") is a 2008 Argentine live-action tv novel. It is [[VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory loosely based]] on the RealLife unsolved kidnapping of Marita Verón by a human trafficking network and her monther's desperate search for her.
3
4The main character is [[BrokenBird Juliana Miguez]], a girl from the (fictional) Argentine village of Río Manso, who is kidnapped and forced to work as a prostitute. Juliana's parents, [[MamaBear Rosario Soler]] and Juan Miguez, begin to search for her, but manage very little, as the local police is involved in the whole network and allows them to operate.
5
6The network of human trafficking is managed by [[BigBad Ástor Monserrat]], who conceals his activities and source of wealth under fake activities as a businessman, even to his own daugther.
7
8The other main character, [[Creator/FacundoArana Bautista Amaya]], gets involved when Monserrat's two henchmen, Nicolás Duarte and [[TheStoic Dante Mansilla]], kill his wife by hitting her with his car while Bautista was [[RescueRomance saving Duarte's wife]] on the mountain. Bautista seeks the killer of his wife, and is not initially aware of the network, or Duarte's relation with Monserrat, and begins dating Monserrat's daughter, Ana.
9
10Later he joins forces with his two friends, the retired prosecutor Fabio Pontevedra and the former police Tano Cigliotti, to bring Monserrat down.
11
12Like other previous argentine novels, fiction was used as a means of social criticism. The series was declared of social interest by the city legislature of Buenos Aires and the House of Representatives of Argentina, and also won numerous awards, like the Martin Fierro de Oro (top Argentine TV award) in 2009.
13----
14!!''Vidas Robadas'' contains examples of:
15%%
16%% PLEASE read Administrivia/ExampleIndentationInTropeLists
17%%
18%%* ActionGirl: Most of the female cast have their small moments, but the one that fits this trope better is probably Juliana, mainly due to CharacterDevelopment.
19%%* ActionHero: Bautista Amaya.
20%%* BrokenBird: Agustina Amaya becomes this after [[spoiler: getting raped by Dante's orders.]]
21%%** Juliana as well.
22%%** Most of the girls saved by Rosario and Belen would probably fit this trope.
23%%* ChildrenAreInnocent: Emma and Joaquin.
24%%* CrapsackWorld: Portrayed [[TruthInTelevision quite realistically, actually]].
25* DeathByOriginStory: Carla, Bautista's wife prior to the start of the series, who was killed in a car accident while Bautista rescued Ana.
26%%* FailureIsTheOnlyOption: The plot was near to rescue Juliana several times, but it only happened during the last episodes.
27%%* HappilyMarried: Nacha and Ástor initially were this, although it took quite a lot of years to get to that [[spoiler: due to Nacha being formerly a sex slave and Ástor, her employer.]]
28%%** Also, Bautista and Carla before her death.
29%%** Juan and Rosario as well, [[spoiler: before he is killed, that is.]]
30%%** And at the end of the series, [[spoiler: Fabio with Alejandra, Bautista with Ana, and Manuel with Mirta.]]
31* HeWhoMustNotBeSeen: Claudio Kurtz, the main head of the network, over even Monserrat himself. He is seen at the last episode, [[spoiler:and captured]].
32* HoneyTrap: Dante seduced Alejandra in order to get closer to her, drug her, convince her she's insane, and eventually kill her (although he failed on the last task).
33%%* MamaBear: Rosario's most prominent feature.
34%%** Also, Ana tends to be quite protective towards Joaquin.
35%%** Ines towards Emma as well.
36%%* MayDecemberRomance: Nacha is notably younger than her husband Ástor.
37%%** Likewise, Nicolás is on his thirties while Juliana is at least ten years younger.
38* MissingMom: Helena abandoned Ana when she divorced Astor, leaving the country to move in with [[spoiler: Kurtz.]]
39* NoCommunitiesWereHarmed: There's no such a city as "Río Manso" in the Buenos Aires province, it's fictional. Still, it's an allegory of the small cities in the Buenos Aires province, distant from the main city of Buenos Aires.
40%%* RapeAsBackstory: [[spoiler: Nacha.]]
41* RasputinianDeath: [[spoiler: Duarte]] was shot SO many times at the ending... it took a round of a machine-gun and being in the very last episode to take him down for good.
42* TheBadGuysAreCops
43%%* TheStoic: Dante.
44%%* TrophyWife: Nacha is downright stated to be this in the beginning, then we get real insight on it when her backstory is revealed.
45%%* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: For the actual case, see [[http://casoveron.org.ar/ El caso Marita Verón]] (in Spanish)

Top