Surrender Tomorrow is a documentary that fascinatingly exposes a Kafkaesque world of corruption and injustice. When Paco Larrañaga, a 19-year-old young man, is accused of a brutal murder, the entire judicial system of the Philippines is questioned. This alleged crime, whose only evidence is the disappearance of two young girls, incriminates an innocent man and pits two grieving mothers against each other who personify the profound differences between the two families and, by extension, the entire country. In 2007, popular pressure from Spanish citizens achieved the transfer of Paco Larrañaga to a Spanish prison from the Philippines. Still in 2012, Paco is still in prison for a crime he never committed. Extras: Meetings in San Sebastián; Trailer; Artistic file; Data sheet
https://dvdstorespain.es/en/best-documentaries-on-blu-ray-and-dvd/15961-give-up-tomorrow-dvd--8436540901675.html15961Give Up Tomorrow [DVD]<div><br />Surrender Tomorrow is a documentary that fascinatingly exposes a Kafkaesque world of corruption and injustice. When Paco Larrañaga, a 19-year-old young man, is accused of a brutal murder, the entire judicial system of the Philippines is questioned. This alleged crime, whose only evidence is the disappearance of two young girls, incriminates an innocent man and pits two grieving mothers against each other who personify the profound differences between the two families and, by extension, the entire country. In 2007, popular pressure from Spanish citizens achieved the transfer of Paco Larrañaga to a Spanish prison from the Philippines. Still in 2012, Paco is still in prison for a crime he never committed. Extras: Meetings in San Sebastián; Trailer; Artistic file; Data sheet</div>https://dvdstorespain.es/541577-home_default/give-up-tomorrow-dvd-.jpg3.2231instockCameo Media,S.L.3.22313.2231002015-06-14T21:01:26+0200/Start/Start/DVD/Start/New/Start/Best Documentaries on Blu-Ray and DVDPacop LarrañagaMichael Collins
Surrender Tomorrow is a documentary that fascinatingly exposes a Kafkaesque world of corruption and injustice. When Paco Larrañaga, a 19-year-old young man, is accused of a brutal murder, the entire judicial system of the Philippines is questioned. This alleged crime, whose only evidence is the disappearance of two young girls, incriminates an innocent man and pits two grieving mothers against each other who personify the profound differences between the two families and, by extension, the entire country. In 2007, popular pressure from Spanish citizens achieved the transfer of Paco Larrañaga to a Spanish prison from the Philippines. Still in 2012, Paco is still in prison for a crime he never committed. Extras: Meetings in San Sebastián; Trailer; Artistic file; Data sheet