Money Heist Wallpapers | Top Money Heist Backgrounds

About Money Heist
Criminal genius “The Professor” has created a plan to pull out the largest bank robbery in recorded history, in which he plans to print billions of euros in the Royal Mint of Spain. This proposal has drawn global notice. To aid him in carrying out his ambitious plan, he selects eight people who each possess specific characteristics and stand to gain nothing by participating in the process. To gain leverage in their negotiations with the authorities, the ring of crook’s kidnaps hostages as they scramble to formulate a strategy for apprehending The Professor, who is now on the run. As the time ticks down to zero, the robbers are preparing for a showdown with the authorities.
Money Heist may be about theft; however, the garments, decorations, and songs employed in the production help us understand the show’s subject of resistance, rebellion, togetherness, skepticism, and anarchy. Every gang member faces their own nightmares, yet their red bodysuits and Salvador Dal faces represent an emblem of revolt against the establishment once they put them. They donned the red costume and masks whenever the robbers initially met up for the theft at the Royal Mint of Spain. After two robberies and four seasons, the emblems still stand out.
The gang chose it to hide their identity from the cops, even forcing their prisoners to wear it as a kind of parity in the minds of the authorities. Perhaps everything happens for a purpose. “Bella Ciao” has its origins in late-nineteenth-century Italy. The Mondina laborers initially sang it to resist the harsh workplace conditions in the rice fields. It was subsequently adopted as a patriotic song of anti-fascist rebellion by Italian revolutionaries against Nazi German troops throughout the Italian Resistance. The emblems from Money Heist have gone viral and have even been deployed in real-life political rallies.