Catalina Creel, has an unconditional love for her son Alejando and because of him, Catalina is willing to kill even her husband Carlos Larios and anyone who stands in his way, trying to hinder the destiny of the dynasty. Not so with Jose Carlos Larios, whom she blames deceptively for having burst an eye with a peg-top in his childhood, in revenge of his rejections, since Catalina was not his true mother. She invents this lie mainly to harass Jose Carlos and secondly to push her husband Carlos to get angry with Jose Carlos and disinherit him, so he turns his interest in expanding the dynasty only in his son Alejandro. Carlos discovers Catalina without the patch she uses to cover her crippled eye and decides to tell everyone about the deceivement, change his will in favor of Jose Carlos and divorce her. But before that, Catalina poisons him. Vilma, Alejandro's wife, is sterile and unable to give Alejandro a son, so she adds to Alejandro's plan to steal the son from a woman named Leonora, whom he cheated using the pretext that he was in love with her. Leonora starts a revenge against Catalina, Alejandro and Vilma through Jose Carlos, whom she takes advantage to enter the house, using the fact that he is in love with her, although in the end, she falls in love with him seriously.
Cast
Awards
Profile
The central character in Cuna de lobos is matriarch Catalina Creel, played by actress María Rubio, a villain in the grand dramatic tradition of Dynasty's Alexis Carrington, Dallas' J. R. Ewing, or Knots Landing's Abby Cunningham. The main character is Leonora, played by Diana Bracho, who portrays the victim of the "wolves", only to "become" a "wolf" herself to seek revenge. Catalina's unnatural devotion to her only son caused her to conceal a healthy eye behind the lie of blindness, commit a series of murders beginning with her own husband, Carlos, and to participate in the abduction of a child to ensure her son's inheritance was confirmed. Such is the impact of her performance, that soap opera's villain take her as a role model, and when a program parodies a soap opera, the main villain is usually based on her.
Popularity
Cuna de lobos was so popular in its native country that on the night of the final broadcast, the streets of Mexico City - infamously choked with traffic - were deserted as the locals were in their homes glued to their TV screens. It has been re-screened several times in the United States and Australia in recent years. A remake has been in talks for several years, with one finally surfacing in 2019.
DVD
The first DVD of Cuna de lobos came out in 2002. It was a single-disc DVD that contained the entire novela edited down to a little over 230 minutes. A second DVD release came on March 8, 2006. While it expanded the novela to over 11 hours played on three DVDs, the original instrumental music and soundtrack had been erased and substituted by new music. According to Televisa, this was due to a disagreement with Mexican actress and producer Carmen Salinas, who now owns the music rights after her deceased son Pedro Plascencia Salinas, producer of the music of the novela.