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Powerful documentary Freeing Juanita screens at the 2025 New Jersey International Film Festival on Sunday, June 1!


By Yuri Kim

originally published: 05/28/2025

Freeing Juanita, directed by Sebastián Lasaosa Rogers, is not the kind of documentary you watch and walk away from unchanged. It stays with you long after the credits roll. At its heart, this is a film about one woman, wrongfully imprisoned. But as you watch it unfold, you realize it’s also about so much more: a broken immigration system, the erasure of Indigenous voices, and the extraordinary strength of family and community.

Our subject: Juanita, a Maya Chuj woman from Guatemala, has spent over seven years in a prison in Reynosa, Mexico, accused of a crime she didn’t commit. Juanita wanted to go to America to find a better life for herself. Instead, she was captured crossing the border and forced to confess to charges of kidnapping and human trafficking in a language she didn’t even understand. No interpreter was provided. She said “yes” to everything out of fear and confusion, and as a result became unjustly detained. Now her aunt and uncle, Ana and Pedro, are fighting to free her and bring her back.

Ana and Pedro’s journey from their hometown in Guatemala to the prison in Reynosa is a thousand-mile odyssey, and the film walks beside them every step of the way. They travel by foot and by bus, in heavy heat, carrying not just backpacks but years of exhaustion and hope. You feel Ana and Pedro and how tired they are, hearing them tell the story of Juanita over and over again to anyone who will listen. It’s such a simple case. The injustice is clear. Why won’t they let her free? But they struggle on, continuing to fight for her and carrying their “Freedom for Juanita” banner with them – Pedro says, “We are always unwelcome in some places. But we won’t rest until we continue.” One can’t help but admire their perseverance.

What makes Freeing Juanita so powerful is that it never feels like it’s trying too hard. Nothing is overdramatized or sentimentalized. The people in this film don’t need embellishment – their honesty, their resilience, and their dignity speak louder than anything else. There’s a rawness to their journey that’s hard to describe, captured beautifully through warm, intimate cinematography that makes you feel like you’re right there beside them. There’s no distance between subject and viewer; the camera invites you in and then quietly steps back, letting real life unfold.


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Even with how personal the film is, it constantly reminds us that what happened to Juanita isn’t just a tragic mistake – it’s part of a broader system that routinely fails people like her. The director makes this clear without ever losing sight of the individual. Rogers smartly weaves in the context of “Plan Frontera Sur,” the 2014 policy pushed by the U.S. to tighten Mexico’s southern border, which directly led to Juanita’s detention. And it shows the ripple effect of that policy: families shattered, identities erased, people forgotten.

But Freeing Juanita isn’t just about injustice. It’s about resistance. It’s about the power of community, especially Indigenous communities, to fight back. We hear chants from mothers of migrant workers: “We are not criminals! We are international workers!” We see migrants coming from different countries connecting and bonding together over their shared experiences, sharing their names. These moments remind you that this story, though deeply personal, is part of a much larger movement.

In the end, Freeing Juanita is both a plea and a promise. A plea for justice: for Juanita, and for the countless others like her. And a promise: that these stories won’t be forgotten. That even in the face of overwhelming silence, there are still voices rising.

Freeing Juanita will be screening as part of the New Jersey International Film Festival on Sunday, June 1, 2025 – Online for 24 Hours and In-Person at 7PM in Voorhees Hall #105/Rutgers University, 71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ. There will be a Q+A session with the producers after the in-person screening. Get more info here.

The 30th annual New Jersey International Film Festival will be taking place between May 30-June 13, 2025. The Festival will be a hybrid one as we will be presenting it online as well as doing select in-person screenings at Rutgers University. All the films will be available virtually via Video on Demand for 24 hours on their show date. VOD start times are at 12 Midnight Eastern USA. Each General Admission Ticket or Festival Pass purchased is good for both the virtual and the in-person when both are offered. Plus, we are very proud to announce that acclaimed singer-songwriter Mike Kovacs will be doing an audio-visual concert on Friday, June 13 at 7PM! The in-person screenings and the Mike Kovacs concert will be held in Voorhees Hall #105/Rutgers University, 71 Hamilton Street, New Brunswick, NJ beginning at 5PM or 7PM on their show date.  General Admission Ticket=$15 Per Program; Festival All Access Pass=$120; In-Person Only Student Ticket=$10 Per Program.

For more info go here: https://2025newjerseyinternationalfilmfestival.eventive.org/welcome

 

 


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