Impressed with Roque's community service and advocacy for women, a filmmaker, Pilar Franco, offers to make a documentary about him.
Roque, however, is a fake and can offer Ana Maria little help beyond advice to leave her abusive relationship; Pilar is disgusted and denounces him as a con man.
In desperation, Ana Maria turns to Luna, a voodoo priestess, who warns her that her husband, Antonio, will be changed by the dark magic.
[1] John Stanley of the San Francisco Chronicle rated it 3/5 stars and wrote that the film has an intriguing setup but becomes clichéd and incoherent once the voodoo element is introduced.
[2] Jeremy Blitz of DVD Talk rated it 2.5/5 stars and wrote that "the dollops of greatness are equally mixed with mediocrity.