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POV: The Infiltrators

Signature art for the docu-thriller hybrid “The Infiltrators,” co-directed by Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra. Meet two young immigrants who get purposefully arrested by Border Patrol and put in a shadowy for-profit detention center. Marco and Viri, members of a group of radical Dreamers, believe the best place to stop deportations is in detention.
Courtesy of Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra/ American Documentary
Signature art for the docu-thriller hybrid “The Infiltrators,” co-directed by Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra. Meet two young immigrants who get purposefully arrested by Border Patrol and put in a shadowy for-profit detention center. Marco and Viri, members of a group of radical Dreamers, believe the best place to stop deportations is in detention.

Monday, Oct. 5, 2020 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV + PBS Video App

POV’s 33rd season is proud to present the national broadcast debut of the docu-thriller hybrid “The Infiltrators,” co-directed by Alex Rivera (Sleep Dealer) and Cristina Ibarra ("Las Marthas," “Dirty Laundry: A Homemade Telenovela”). Winner of both the 'NEXT Innovator' and 'Audience Award' at the Sundance Film Festival, “The Infiltrators” tells the true story of two young immigrants who in 2012 were detained by the U.S. Border Patrol — on purpose — and put in a shadowy for-profit detention center in Broward County, Florida.

Marco Saavedra and Viridiana “Viri” Martinez, who have protected status through the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA), are members of the National Immigrant Youth Alliance, a group of radical DREAMers who are on a mission to stop deportations. And the best place to stop deportations, they believe, is in detention facilities.

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However, when Saavedra and Martinez attempt a daring reverse ‘prison break,’ things don’t go according to plan. By weaving together documentary footage of the real infiltrators with re-enactments of the events inside the detention center, “The Infiltrators” tells an incredible and thrilling true story by way of a genre-defying cinematic language.

The activists that feature as protagonists — Saavedra, Martinez, and Claudio Rojas — were filmed as they planned and organized their campaign from a ‘safe house.’ Rivera and Ibarra then built the narrative around that documentary footage, additional interview material, community archival videos, broadcast news material and internal government documents that they obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.

Many of the film’s extras in the reenacted segments are undocumented or formerly detained individuals themselves. The filmmaking process, from start to finish, was designed to center the experiences of people whose perspectives are often left out of official renderings of the immigration process.

Having made films on issues surrounding the border and U.S.–Latin American immigration since the mid 1990s, Rivera started noticing something in 2010 that he’d never seen before: immigrants getting arrested on purpose, and risking their own deportation, as an act of political protest.

Rather than living in the shadows, these young undocumented activists were choosing to make their situations highly visible as a means to demand political change and freedom to pursue a full life in the only country they knew.

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“We live in a national reality in which hundreds of thousands of immigrants are being disappeared into for-profit detention centers, without trial, without attorneys representing them,” said Rivera. “Very few images of the insides of these facilities have leaked out—the corporations that run them tightly, control the flow of images. When we met the real-life activists—the infiltrators—we were captivated by their radical imagination. They had a bold plan for uncovering what was meant to remain in the shadows.”

“To tell this incredible true story we developed a new way of seeing,” said Ibarra. “Inspired by the ‘performance’ that eventually got the infiltrators detained, we used our documentary camera to follow the real people, and then worked with actors and a script to tell the story inside detention that was otherwise un-seeable. The vision and voice of undocumented leaders pushed us to develop a new visual language."

Rivera and Ibarra said: “With the 2020 presidential election fast approaching, the rights of America’s undocumented population have perhaps never before been such a hot-ticket item — or more at stake. We hope that our film inspires audiences to find visionary political solutions to the crisis of immigrant detention. It starts with seeing.”

Since shooting the film, issues surrounding immigration have once again risen to the forefront of contemporary political conversation. With the 2020 presidential election fast approaching, the rights of America’s undocumented population have perhaps never before been such a hot-ticket item — or more at stake.

Following “The Infiltrators” 2019 festival premiere, lead protagonist Claudio Rojas was detained and launched into deportation proceedings — a surreal mirroring of the film’s plot in real time — and has since been deported back to his home country of Argentina after twenty years in the United States.

Family members and lawyers close to his case believe that Claudio’s arrest may have been directly linked to his participation in the film – and part of an illegal pattern of retribution by ICE against immigrant activists.

Watch On Your Schedule:

This film will stream online on POV.org in concurrence with its broadcast.

Watch with the PBS Video App, or full episodes of POV are available to stream on demand with the KPBS Video Player for a limited time after broadcast.

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Credits:

Directors: Alex Rivera, Cristina Ibarra. Screenwriters: Alex Rivera, Aldo Velasco. Producers: Cristina Ibarra, Darren Dean, Daniel J. Chalfen. Executive Producers: Steve Cohen, Paula Froehle, Lagralane Group, Ken Nolan, Christina Nolan, Ken Pelletier, Katy Drake Bettner, Jim Butterworth.