When a small town near the Arizona-Mexico border is wiped out overnight, suspicion falls on the lone survivor. But a roll of photos the survivor took that night tells a different story.
This movie contains 28 potentially triggering events.
Salazar is accused of pedophilia for taking photographs of a young girl, although no real evidence is presented. They are all perfectly normal photographs.
no hangings occur in the movie, but they discuss lynchings in arizona done by the KKK and show photographs of the KKK, but not of any actual lynchings. one character talks about how criminals should be publicly hanged as a deterrent to other criminals. in another scene, they discuss the mexican cartel hanging bodies from highways and show paper mannequins hanging from a building.
Part of the massacre happened at the preschool. Some of the "interviewees" talk about the children lost there. Bloody "crime scene" photos are shown of the classrooms.
no, but a prisoner is interviewed by a psychotherapist while detained. he is clearly suffering the effects of trauma and is quiet and closed off, but the psychotherapist is empathetic.
a character is seen as completely closed off and emotionally shut down during an interrogation. very calm and seemingly "emotionless" from trauma, but breaks down in some later scenes, crying. later, it is mentioned that he lapses into a catatonic state and must be force-fed by prison authorities.
A priest gives his opinions during the mockumentary, making references to baptism, the resurrection of Christ, and more.
A man goes insane and his religious ramblings are recorded as he describes himself as "Abraham" and needing to "deliver his family into the hands of God"