Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
Do you have a video playback issues?
Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
After two years of Sons of Anarchy, the series takes after Ezekiel 'EZ' Reyes, the skilled son of a glad Latino family. After he gets out from the jail, he chooses to take his retribution for his family. He experiences an energizing enterprise behind the persons who have pulverized his family.
Mayans MC finds the brand slightly invigorated by a new cultural context, but fails utterly to replicate or even emulate much of what Sons of Anarchy actually did best.
Holds the potential to be more sweeping and heartbreaking than its predecessor, and Mayans M.C. (mostly) successfully distances itself from Sons while preserving its legacy.
The biggest problem is that the universe created here by Sutter and James feels more like the product of research plus flights of fancy than of a burning need to communicate lived experience.
It's a big cast, and it's no sin if not everyone pops at first, but that nobody stands out early on is worrisome - particularly where JD Pardo is concerned.
A roaring good time that retains much of what made the flagship drama so powerful, but with a (mostly) new cast and a refreshing new narrative that will mix its wide-open highways with the darker corners of Kurt Sutter's storytelling.
While the character drama is compelling and often well-acted, the viciousness of this world proves a barrier to entry some viewers will understandably choose not to cross.