Sin código

Sin código

From left to right: Axel (Nicolás Cabré), Gabriel Nielsen (Adrián Suar), Antonia López (Nancy Dupláa)
Genre Police procedural
Created by Adrián Suar
Starring Adrián Suar
Nicolás Cabré
Nancy Dupláa
Country of origin Argentina
Original language(s) Spanish
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 104
Production
Producer(s) Pol-Ka
Broadcast
Original channel El Trece
Original run October 27, 2004 – January 5, 2006
Chronology
Preceded by Una familia especial
Followed by Sos mi vida
Related shows Los únicos

Sin código (Spanish: Without rules) was an Argentine telenovela that aired from 2004 to 2006 on the El Trece television network. It was produced by Pol-Ka, and the main actors were Adrián Suar, Nancy Dupláa, and Nicolás Cabré. It was nominated in several categories for the Martín Fierro Awards in 2004, 2005, and 2006, and won three times in 2005.

Plot

Gabriel Nielsen (Suar) and Oso (Antonio Grimau) have a private security company known as Nielsen Security. Axel (Cabré), the son of Oso, wants to join it but he is rejected. When Oso is murdered, Gabriel and Axel join forces to capture the criminal. In the second season, most employees resign, and policewoman Antonia López (Dupláa) joins the agency.

Awards

Sin código received two nominations for the 2004 Martín Fierro Awards, as best miniseries and best actor in a miniseries (Cabré). It did not win the award in either category.[1] At the 2005 ceremony for the same awards, the program received several nominations. Rita Cortese, nominated alongside Griselda Siciliani, won the Martín Fierro for secondary actress in comedy; Siciliani won the Martín Fierro for new actress.[2] Favio Posca, Nicolás Scarpino and Alfredo Casero were nominated as best secondary actors in a comedy series; Scarpino won the award.[2] Other unsuccessful nominations were best comedy, lead actor in a comedy series (Suar) and lead actress in a comedy series (Dupláa).[2] It received two nominations in 2006, for lead actress in a comedy series (Dupláa) and supporting actor in a comedy series (Scarpino), but did not win either award.[3]

In other media

Sin código had a spin-off, the 2011 superhero live action television series Los únicos, in which Cabré reprised his role as Axel. In the first episodes Cabré had telephone discussions with Gabriel Nielsen; Suar (who is also the head of Pol-Ka, the producers of the program) reprised his character in April.[4] Siciliani worked on Los únicos as well, but with a new character. She made a cameo with her former character, while still working with her current one.[5]

Suar had plans to make a film out of the series.[6] The first testings would be made in January 2006, and the filming would begin on February. However, when he returned from his vacation in January, he cancelled the project. This angered Cabré and Dupláa, who had rejected other plans for that year to take part in the film. Dupláa stayed for some months in Spain with her husband, and Cabré moved to rival channel Telefe. Suar temporarily gave up acting and focused on his work as producer.[6]

Cast

References

  1. "Ternas Martín Fierro Capital, producción 2004" (PDF) (in Spanish). APTRA. June 20, 2005. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Martín Fierro a la poducción 2005" [Martín Fierro for 2005 works] (PDF) (in Spanish). APTRA. May 29, 2006. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  3. "Martín Fierro a la producción 2006" [Martín Fierro for 2006 works] (PDF) (in Spanish). APTRA. May 23, 2007. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  4. Micaela Levitt (April 6, 2011). "Del teléfono a la pantalla: Adrián Suar aparecerá as Gabriel Nielsen en Los Unicos" [From the phone to the screen: Adrián Suar will appear as Gabriel Nielsen in Los únicos] (in Spanish). Ciudad. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  5. "Griselda Siciliani vuelve a hacer el personaje con el que enamoró a Adrián Suar" [Griselda Siciliani reprises the character that Adrián Suar loved] (in Spanish). Ciudad. May 29, 2011. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Suar, sin códigos" [Adrián Suar, without codes] (in Spanish). Infobae. January 31, 2006. Retrieved November 23, 2013.

External links