


Lluís Gros, condenado a 23 años de prisión por abusos sexuales, pide al youtuber y cineasta Carles Tamayo un documental de su vida para limpiar su imagen tras su condena. Carles accede pensando que Gros pedirá perdón, pero al ver que no es su intención y que sigue en libertad, trata de averiguar por qué sigue impune. Tras meses de seguimiento y una exhaustiva investigación, Carles descubre muchos otros crímenes de Gros que lo motivan a luchar para que se haga justicia. Es la historia de cómo el ego de un criminal acaba siendo su perdición y de la lucha de Carles Tamayo en busca de justicia.
Avis de la communauté (2)
[Prime Video] An amateur video blog that disguises itself as investigative journalism to cover up its tendency towards sensationalism. Claiming to be a defender of victims, it nevertheless makes the protagonist an abuser who portrays himself (and a guilty verdict). But the level of journalistic investigation of the "I'll ask my sister, who is a nurse" type does not seem to be very deep, and the hypocrisy that it continually transmits, going into explicit details of the abuses that are not necessary, makes it not only irrelevant as a documentary but tendentious as an accusation.
Could it have been better? Probably. As a fellow filmmaker, I understand the difficulty of shooting a lot of footage and then trying to piece it together to form a cohesive story. Nevertheless, this miniseries has a lot of merit in my opinion. For one thing, Carles Tamayo found more of Lluis Gros' victims, which the prosecution failed to find and interview. It also exemplifies the sheer incompetence of the justice system in Spain because even though Mr Gros had an apprehension order dated to a few months earlier, it lacked a signature by an official meaning it wasn't even uploaded on the system. Moreover, during this time Mr Gros had contact with minors and even showed intentions of fleeing to Morocco. Also of note is the fact that the apprehension order only showed Mr Gros' last name initials and not his full name. The biggest merit this miniseries has is that it raises the question of how much are pedophiles protected by the system. My only point of contention with this miniseries is that it doesn't seem like Mr Tamayo researched enough the possibility of Lluis Gros Martin being innocent, but at the same time after seeing him make tasteless jokes about pedophilia and also making inappropriate remarks to minors he was tutoring (while being filmed) there was no doubt in my mind that this sorry excuse for a man was guilty and maybe that's how Mr Tamayo saw it. Overall, it's definitely worth a watch of you can stomach the subject it touches.













