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When all seems lost, the possibility arises of collecting the ransom via bank transfer in Switzerland. Alfonso travels there. The one hundred million pesetas are within reach. But the police find the hideout and free Quini.
In 1981, three mechanics from Zaragoza, Alfonso, Jorge, and Gabi, overwhelmed by debt and after months of unemployment, decided to kidnap the league's top scorer, Enrique Castro "Quini," the FC Barcelona striker. They demanded 100 million pesetas for his release. But they soon discovered, the hard way, that life isn't like the movies. And that being bad, when you're good, isn't easy at all.
Zaragoza, 1981. Alfonso, Jorge, and Salva are trying to make ends meet with the small motorcycle repair shop they've set up in a basement, but their financial situation is desperate. Half-jokingly, half-seriously, they come up with the idea of kidnapping someone and getting a hefty ransom. Transformed from unemployed laborers into criminals, surprisingly, their plan succeeds. They manage to kidnap and hold Enrique Castro "Quini," FC Barcelona striker and one of the stars of the moment, in a makeshift cellar in their mechanic's workshop. The price for his release: one hundred million pesetas.