🎭 OTT Deep Dive | May 2026
Money Heist:
Berlin Returns — Romance &
The Perfect Heist
2026
There’s a certain kind of character who doesn’t just walk into a room — he arrives. Tuxedo sharp. Movements slow on purpose. Eyes that are already five steps ahead of everyone else in the space. That’s Berlin. And if you’ve been counting the days since he disappeared from your screen, the wait is almost over.
Berlin Season 2 is shaping up to be the most stylishly unhinged television event of 2026. And no, that’s not an exaggeration. Andrés de Fonollosa — that’s his real name, though “Berlin” feels more right — is back. This time with a new heist, a new obsession, and all the arrogance the character has always carried like a well-tailored coat.
Whether you watched Money Heist from episode one or binge-crashed it during a lockdown weekend, Berlin as a character always hit different. He was the villain you couldn’t stop watching. The antihero you were probably rooting for despite knowing better. Season 2 of his own show promises to push that even further.
Who is Berlin, Really?
Let’s start with the basics — because if you only know Berlin as “that cold guy from Money Heist who caused problems,” you’ve barely scratched the surface.
Berlin is Andrés de Fonollosa, the older half-brother of The Professor. He’s a career criminal, yes. But also a trained opera lover. A man who’s been married five times. Someone who quotes philosophy mid-robbery and genuinely believes he’s operating from a kind of moral code — even if that code belongs entirely to him and nobody else.
He has a terminal illness — Helmer’s myopathy — and that diagnosis changed everything about how he moved through the world. When you know your time is running out, you either fall apart or decide to live so intensely that each moment feels like a finale. Berlin chose the latter. That’s what made him magnetic to watch.
“He doesn’t see himself as the villain. He sees himself as the only honest man in the room.”
On the character of Berlin — Money Heist Universe
Pedro Alonso brought something genuinely rare to the role. There’s a stillness to his performance that most actors can’t do — the sense that the character is always thinking more than he’s saying. You watch him and you feel slightly unsettled, like you’re being outsmarted in a conversation you thought was casual.
Why a Spinoff Was the Right Move
When La Casa de Papel ended, Berlin’s absence from the final heist left a gap no other character could fill. The show knew it. Fans knew it. Creator Álex Pina knew it.
The spinoff format gives the character something the original series couldn’t — time. Space to explore the man before the red jumpsuit. The heists he ran in Paris, in Berlin, across Europe. The loves he burned through. The code he built his life around. It’s prequel territory, but it never feels like backstory filler — it feels like the actual story, finally being told.
Season 1 Recap: What We Got
Season 1 of Berlin dropped on Netflix in late 2023 and did something that takes real confidence — it slowed everything down. Deliberately.
Instead of the breakneck pace of La Casa de Papel, Berlin leaned into atmosphere. Long dinner scenes. Conversations about art and obsession. Heist planning that felt more like seduction than strategy. The Paris setting gave it a different texture entirely — champagne and shadows rather than gunfire and chaos.
The heist at the centre of Season 1 — involving a stolen jewel collection and a series of aristocratic targets across France — worked as much as a romance as a crime story. Berlin fell for Camille. His crew dynamic was complicated, funny, and occasionally infuriating in the best way. And the show established clearly that this wasn’t going to be a lesser version of Money Heist. It was something else entirely.
What the First Season Built
The most important thing Season 1 did was establish that Berlin as a lead character can carry a show on his own terms. He’s not a sidekick. He’s not a villain-of-the-week. He has a full inner life — contradictory, hypocritical, occasionally brilliant — and the show committed to exploring it without softening the edges.
It also built out his crew in ways that gave Season 2 strong foundations. Damián — the nervous genius. Roi — impulsive, loyal, unreliable. Keila — sharp and quietly the most competent person in every room. These characters got real development, not just function.
Season 2: Everything We Know
Here’s where it gets genuinely exciting. Season 2 of Berlin is reportedly darker, faster, and more emotionally charged than its predecessor. Álex Pina and the writing team have been vocal that they took the Season 1 feedback and came back with something that doesn’t ask you to be patient — it just takes you.
The new heist is said to involve a target with deep personal significance to Berlin — which is a different kind of story than a professional job. When things get personal, Berlin’s control starts to crack, and that’s precisely when Pedro Alonso’s performance tends to be most extraordinary.
Every season of Berlin has a central love story that’s as much about power and obsession as it is about actual feeling. Season 2 reportedly raises the stakes — a connection that genuinely threatens to change how Berlin operates. For a man who’s always kept love at arm’s length while also chasing it relentlessly, that’s dangerous territory.
One of the genuinely underrated things about the Berlin series is its visual design. Period costumes. Saturated European light. Heist sequences that feel choreographed like ballet. Season 2 is said to be even more visually ambitious — a show that understands that how something looks is inseparable from what it means.
Berlin’s heists have always been psychological as much as logistical. He doesn’t just steal things — he constructs elaborate scenarios where the targets almost participate in their own undoing. Season 2’s heist is reportedly the most intricate yet, with multiple moving parts and a finale that the writers have described as “operatic.” That word choice feels deliberately chosen.
What made the crew in Season 1 work was genuine friction. People with different ethics and different breaking points thrown together by necessity. Season 2 brings returning faces plus new additions — and based on what’s been teased, at least one crew member’s loyalty is going to be tested in a way the audience won’t see coming.
Music has always been Berlin’s private language — he quotes opera, he hums to himself in moments of tension. The show uses its soundtrack the way good heist films do: as emotional counterpoint. Tension scored to something beautiful. Violence adjacent to elegance. Season 2 reportedly has sequences built entirely around musical set pieces.
Without giving away specifics — the spinoff has always maintained a careful relationship with the original series timeline. Season 2 is expected to deepen those connections, potentially revealing context that reframes things viewers thought they understood from Money Heist. That kind of retroactive storytelling, done well, is enormously satisfying.
“Berlin doesn’t commit crimes. He stages performances. Everyone else is just in the cast.”
The character logic at the heart of Season 2
What Makes Berlin Different from Other Crime Shows
There’s a reason Berlin works when a lot of prestige crime drama doesn’t. It’s not the heists — those are everywhere. It’s the interiority.
Most crime shows are about the mechanics of crime: the planning, the execution, the cover-up. Berlin is about the psychology of a man who chooses crime as a form of expression. He steals because he finds the act meaningful. He builds elaborate operations because the design of them is satisfying to him aesthetically. He falls in love constantly because he’s genuinely incapable of treating anything — people included — as temporary or disposable, even when he’s behaving as if he is.
🔑 What Sets Berlin Apart — The Real Reasons It Works
- Character over plot: The heist is always secondary to what it reveals about who Berlin is. Most crime shows invert this, and the result is clever but hollow.
- Pedro Alonso’s physical precision: The way he holds himself — slightly too still, always slightly too composed — communicates character constantly. It’s a masterclass in non-verbal performance.
- Moral ambiguity that isn’t lazy: Berlin is genuinely hard to categorise. Not “bad guy who’s secretly good,” not “good intentions, bad methods.” He’s a full person with values that just happen to be completely his own.
- European atmosphere done seriously: The show commits to its Paris setting without turning it into postcard tourism. It actually feels like a specific place with texture and history.
- Romance as plot engine: Love in Berlin isn’t a subplot. It’s structurally central. The emotional stakes and the criminal stakes are the same stakes.
- Humour that earns it: Berlin is frequently funny — but the comedy comes from character, not from comic relief sidekicks. Watching a man this controlled be genuinely surprised is hilarious in a way that sneak-attacks you.
Why Indian Fans Are Especially Invested
Money Heist had a specific relationship with Indian audiences that went beyond what the show achieved almost anywhere else. India’s streaming numbers for La Casa de Papel consistently ranked among Netflix’s highest globally. The show became genuinely cultural — Bella Ciao was heard at protests. The red jumpsuits were recognisable at Halloween parties three years running.
Berlin, as a spinoff, inherits that loyalty — but also has to earn it separately. And from what the Indian audience response to Season 1 suggested, it did. The character’s combination of intellect, emotional intensity, and controlled chaos tends to resonate strongly here. There’s something about a protagonist who takes both ideas and feelings with absolute seriousness that works.
Season 2 is expected to generate similar energy. The show’s social media presence in India heading into the launch has been notably strong — fan edits, character analysis threads, prediction posts. The kind of organic engagement that can’t be manufactured by a marketing budget.
What to Expect from the Heist Itself
Without getting into spoiler territory — because half the joy of Berlin is being surprised — there are structural things we can say about what Season 2’s central job is likely to involve, based on what the creators have teased and what the Season 1 setup implied.
- ▸Scale: Bigger than Season 1. Multiple locations. An operation that requires the whole crew functioning simultaneously rather than in sequence.
- ▸Personal stakes: Something about this heist is connected to Berlin’s past. It’s not purely professional — there’s something being resolved, or avenged, or reclaimed.
- ▸A betrayal: There’s almost certainly a betrayal at the structural centre of this season. The question is who, and in which direction.
- ▸An ending that surprises: Pina’s track record suggests the finale will do something that reframes what you watched. Bank on it.
Final Word:
The Curtain’s Going Up Again.
For fans of the Money Heist universe, this is the continuation the story deserved. Not a cash-grab, not a nostalgia exercise — an actual attempt to go deeper into a character who has always had more depth than any single show could fully excavate.
The heist is elegant. The romance is complicated. The style is immaculate. And Berlin — older, sharper, more dangerous than ever — is exactly where he should be: standing in the middle of something he designed himself, watching it unfold.
Some characters are built for series. Berlin was built for an era. And it looks like his era isn’t finished yet.
OTT Deep Dive — May 2026


