The case which is placed in the context of the Mapuche conflict, describes the 19th-century conquest of the desert with historical revisionism and links modern governors to it.
It does not refer to the refusal of the Mapuche settlement to allow Judge Otranto to investigate the crime scene, where the corpse of Santiago Maldonado was eventually found.
[1] Bauer told the press that "the film was born when a group of people—many of us very young—set out to tackle the case of Santiago Maldonado; to see who he was, to become familiar with the landscapes and places he visited and put a face to his story".
She said that the documentary was just an example of the Relato K and that Kirchnerism tried to shoehorn it as a case of a forced disappearance to draw comparisons between the government of Mauricio Macri and the National Reorganization Process.
[2] Diego Batlle, from the newspaper La Nación, pointed out that the documentary included several unpublished images and filmings, but does not provide new noteworthy information to the case.