Overview
- Netflix rolled out the first look at the docuseries and signaled a projected mid‑2027 premiere on the platform.
- The series builds on Luna’s voice messages and home videos from dialysis and hospital stays, paired with new testimony from family, friends, journalists, the prosecutor and lawyer Fernando Burlando.
- Ezequiel Luna oversees the production and says his sister asked him to keep filming so her story could guide others.
- Argentine judicial authorities ordered an expanded medical forensic examination to assess Dr. Aníbal Lotocki’s possible responsibility for Luna’s death.
- Friends reacted in different ways after the trailer, as Soledad Rodríguez described Luna’s final months as a long torture and others such as Ximena Capristo and Gustavo Conti chose not to appear.