Prime Video is renewing “La Oficina,” the Amazon MGM Studios Mexican adaptation of worldwide hit “The Workplace”, after the profitable March 13 launch of Season 1.
“La Oficina” is ready in Aguascalientes in central Mexico and follows the misadventures of the staff of the family-owned cleaning soap firm Jabones Olimpo, led by its inept nepo-baby regional supervisor Jerónimo Ponce III, performed by Fernando Bonilla (“Las Muertas,” “Un Extraño Enemigo”).
Produced by Amazon MGM Studios and Máquina Vega, the Mexican collection is the newest worldwide iteration of the uber profitable BBC Studios collection “The Workplace”, created by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Service provider, becoming a member of reversions within the U.S., France, Chile, Poland, Australia and a number of other different territories.
“‘La Oficina’ actually broke by in Mexico in a means that felt instant and sustained,” Javiera Balmaceda, Amazon MGM Studios’ head of native originals for Latin America, Canada and Australia, instructed Selection. “It shortly turned our most-watched title on Prime Video regionally and, extra importantly, it caught — audiences preserve discovering it and speaking about it properly after launch,” she added.
Vogue Mexico not too long ago praised “La Oficina” for introducing new or little-known Mexican actors, saying that “this choice completely displays the essence of ‘The Workplace.’ Ricky Gervais rose to world fame after creating and starring in it, whereas it was the primary main position for actors like Martin Freeman.”
Information of the renewal comes as Balmaceda described comedy as a key factor in Amazon Prime Video’s content material combine. “Comedy is a large a part of how we take into consideration storytelling in Latin America — it actually connects with audiences and displays the tradition in a really direct, recognizable means,” she instructed Selection.
On board to direct and government produce as soon as extra is Gaz Alazraki, a seminal determine within the Mexican movie and tv trade who wrote, produced and directed the film “Nosotros los Nobles.” Launched by Warner Bros. in 2013, the movie turned the highest-grossing Mexican film of all time, dethroning “The Crime of Padre Amaro” after claiming that title for 11 years.
Alazraki and “La Oficina” showrunner Marcos Bucay labored collectively on the hit present “Membership de Cuervos,” starring Luis Gerardo Méndez (“Nosotros los Nobles”) and Maria Treviño (“A Man Known as Otto”), which was Netflix’s first absolutely non-English language unique collection.
“It’s the primary time I tackle such a beloved title. My different present was an unique thought. That is the largest IP on the earth, so there was quite a bit on the road. On the identical time, I needed to make one thing new with it, and the response has been excellent. Everybody felt there was no purpose to the touch such a beloved IP, however as soon as they noticed what we did with it, they embraced it wholeheartedly,” Alazraki instructed Selection.
Season 2 of “La Oficina” has but to obtain a premiere date, however Balmaceda instructed Selection that the writers are already “constructing on what resonated most from the primary season – leaning even additional into the characters and the sort of office humor audiences actually responded to.” The collection will once more be shot within the State of Mexico.
Selection caught up briefly with Balmaceda, Alazraki and Bucay.
Has it been particularly satisfying ultimately to supply this present?
Gaz Alazraki: It was very satisfying! For starters, the chance to have a pre-lit soundstage allowed us to alter set ups in lower than 10 minutes. So we had been in a position to concentrate on performances and do quite a lot of takes. We didn’t should rush. We had been in a position to reshoot issues we didn’t like. We rehearsed. We additionally created a bit of compact studio in an industrial park with make-up, wardrobe and the artwork division. So we had been very environment friendly. Additionally our actors had been consuming with different staff from the commercial park on the native taquerías, nonetheless wearing character. So it was a really natural manufacturing.
Why do you assume “La Oficina” has resonated so properly in Latin America, Brazil and Spain?
Alazraki: I feel Latin American workplaces have a distinct model of chaos given the quantity of household corporations and lack of authorized enforcement that permits for a distinct sort of ethos to exist within the work area. And whereas the Anglo variations of the present definitely captured a well-recognized working atmosphere, there’s a layer that stems from making a Latin American model, on a streamer like Amazon, which gave us free rein to go so far as we needed and created a brand new model of the present you don’t get to see from Anglo international locations.
Why do you assume it’s essential to create unique native tales?
Alazraki: I feel that we have to see ourselves on the display screen. There are native conversations that should be had between our content material and our viewers, in an effort to create social motion in several areas of life. It turns into a part of an area id and native tradition.
How do you clarify the worldwide phenomenon that “The Workplace” has grow to be?
Alazraki: Workplaces demand a sure uniformity throughout the globe, which is fascinating once you understand how they appear throughout totally different cultures. Regardless of how conservative or liberal, non secular or agnostic, fashionable or traditional a society is, all of them must adapt to workplace life. And it turns into a trying glass at how we’re all the identical, as people, as soon as we have to conform to sure inflexible constructions. And that itself is fascinating to look at.
What was the largest problem in adapting “The Workplace” to the Mexican model?
Marcos Bucay: Discovering that candy spot between honoring the format and making it really feel genuinely ours. So the problem was constructing recent tales that also carry that painfully actual workplace power, however with a spicy Mexican twist.
What can we anticipate from Season 2?
Bucay: The whole lot will get stranger, and someway extra relatable. We increase the world, reply the chaos we left behind, and introduce new characters who stir issues up. Sudden workplace romances, a French cleaning soap conglomerate, and perhaps even a horse within the workplace. “La Oficina” spirals into extra absurd territory – however in a means that feels oddly acquainted should you’ve ever labored in Mexico.
What makes this model distinctive?
Bucay: Mexico already appears like a scripted comedy. A norteño band randomly exhibits up mid-workday, the group breaks a report with a large cleaning soap bar, the boss brings a homeless man to show individuals about motivation… surreal is regular right here—so “La Oficina” doesn’t push actuality, it simply presses report.
What stood out for you about Season 1?
Javiera Balmaceda: What stood out was how followers made it their very own. Scenes and characters became memes nearly in a single day, manufacturers began exhibiting up in on-line dialog, and we noticed all the things from assume items to fan debates about favourite moments. That sort of engagement translated into individuals actively asking for extra — extra seasons, extra episodes — which made the demand for Season 2 very clear.
How does comedy match into Amazon MGM Studios’ technique in Latin America?
Balmaceda: We’re centered on constructing exhibits that may return and develop with audiences, like “La Oficina” in Mexico or “Porno y Helado”in Argentina, whereas additionally persevering with to scale codecs like “LOL: Final One Laughing,” which began in Mexico and has gone on to resonate in a number of markets. On the identical time, we’re pushing into new voices and tones — initiatives like “Prefiero la Muerte” present how far we are able to stretch the style. The objective is a slate that feels native, distinctive and genuinely entertaining.
John Hopewell contributed to this text.


















