
La Unidad S02
Director: Dani de la Torre (overall lead) with Oskar Santos co-directing episodes in Season 2
Cast: Nathalie Poza (Carla Torres), Michel Noher (Marcos Cobos), Marian Álvarez (Miriam), Luis Zahera (Sergio), Fariba Sheikhan (Nawja), Raúl Fernández de Pablo (Roberto), Carlos Blanco Vila (Ramón), Fele Martínez (Sanabria)
La Unidad Season 2 picks up after the Spanish anti‑terrorist special police unit achieves a major victory: capturing one of the world’s most wanted jihadist leaders. But their success unleashes a vengeful terrorist cell that turns the team into primary targets in a deadly “countdown” that puts them—and their loved ones—at risk Dailymotion+2YouTube+2YouTube+2Wikipedia.
Led by Chief Commissioner Carla Torres (Nathalie Poza), the Unit is plunged into crisis: terrorism shifts from external threat to direct assault on its members. As bombs and attacks escalate, Carla, her colleague Marcos Cobos (Michel Noher), and the rest of the team must uncover a possible mole inside their ranks while shielding their intimate circles—especially Carla’s daughter Lúa, now a key figure in the story tvguide.combuendiaestudios.comellascomunicacion.com.
Season 2 deepens personal arcs: past grief over the deaths of Sanabria (Fele Martínez) and Sergio (Luis Zahera) weighs heavily on the team, fractures relationships and fuels tension JustWatchPrime Video. A sense of mistrust grows among agents. The Unit executes a high-stakes gambit—bringing the suspect’s children from abroad to Spain—in hopes of luring the terrorist into the open tvguide.combuendiaestudios.com.
The writing by Alberto Marini, Amèlia Mora, Alfred Pérez‑Farga and Roger Danès blends procedural precision with emotional drama. The season sustains the series’ high production values: sweeping locations spanning Galicia, Melilla and European cities, tight cinematography by Josu Inchaustegui, and intense action sequences that feel grounded in realism Wikipedia+2Wikipedia+2ellascomunicacion.com+2.
Across six episodes, Season 2 grips viewers with suspense and moral complexity. It tests loyalties and resilience, offering both adrenaline‑charged moments and quieter, character‑driven scenes. Ultimately, the Unit must face not just external enemies, but internal fractures and personal sacrifice—but in doing so, they reaffirm their unwavering commitment to protect Spain at any cost.
La Unidad Season 2 picks up after the Spanish anti‑terrorist special police unit achieves a major victory: capturing one of the world’s most wanted jihadist leaders. But their success unleashes a vengeful terrorist cell that turns the team into primary targets in a deadly “countdown” that puts them—and their loved ones—at risk Dailymotion+2YouTube+2YouTube+2Wikipedia.
Led by Chief Commissioner Carla Torres (Nathalie Poza), the Unit is plunged into crisis: terrorism shifts from external threat to direct assault on its members. As bombs and attacks escalate, Carla, her colleague Marcos Cobos (Michel Noher), and the rest of the team must uncover a possible mole inside their ranks while shielding their intimate circles—especially Carla’s daughter Lúa, now a key figure in the story tvguide.combuendiaestudios.comellascomunicacion.com.
Season 2 deepens personal arcs: past grief over the deaths of Sanabria (Fele Martínez) and Sergio (Luis Zahera) weighs heavily on the team, fractures relationships and fuels tension JustWatchPrime Video. A sense of mistrust grows among agents. The Unit executes a high-stakes gambit—bringing the suspect’s children from abroad to Spain—in hopes of luring the terrorist into the open tvguide.combuendiaestudios.com.
The writing by Alberto Marini, Amèlia Mora, Alfred Pérez‑Farga and Roger Danès blends procedural precision with emotional drama. The season sustains the series’ high production values: sweeping locations spanning Galicia, Melilla and European cities, tight cinematography by Josu Inchaustegui, and intense action sequences that feel grounded in realism Wikipedia+2Wikipedia+2ellascomunicacion.com+2.
Across six episodes, Season 2 grips viewers with suspense and moral complexity. It tests loyalties and resilience, offering both adrenaline‑charged moments and quieter, character‑driven scenes. Ultimately, the Unit must face not just external enemies, but internal fractures and personal sacrifice—but in doing so, they reaffirm their unwavering commitment to protect Spain at any cost.