Santo Domingo. From the language of documentary cinema, RD Positiva bursts into the public debate with a work that bets less on closed answers and more on the necessary questions.
"The Great Opportunity," which will premiere next Sunday at the Eduardo Brito National Theater, at 8:30 pm, is presented as an audiovisual exercise of memory, analysis, and collective projection that invites us to rethink the course of Dominican society from multiple perspectives.
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With an approximate duration of one hour, the documentary, by Luis E. Molina, produced and directed by Jasen Blanco, articulates testimonies, reflections, and personal experiences to construct a choral portrait of the country. Throughout the work, critical perspectives and in-depth analyses of the social transformations occurring in the Dominican Republic are alternated, generating a space for awareness, dialogue, and civic engagement, beyond simple testimonial recording. The production brings together 25 influential voices from different fields of thought, culture, communication and public life, including Iván Gatón, Edis Sánchez, Freddy Ginebra, Kim Sánchez, Marivell Contreras, José Mármol, Yvonne Núñez, Melvin Peña, Miralba Ruiz, Marien Capitán, Alfonso Quiñones, Vicente Vargas, Soraya Lara, Aquiles Correa, Denisse Espaillat, Ricardo Nieves, Cornelia Margarita, Noel Giraldi, José Cuello, Daniel Pou, Jesús Moreno, Mite Nishio, Ángel Rosario, Eduardo Valcárcel and Pito Mota. Each of the participants brings a particular vision on the role that citizens can and should assume in the construction of a more just, conscious, and supportive nation. The documentary avoids a one-way discourse and relies on the diversity of perspectives as its main narrative strength, proposing an open reflection on identity, social responsibility, and a shared future. The special screening of "The Big Opportunity" will feature a subsequent cocktail in the exterior areas of the Eduardo Brito National Theater, conceived as a space for the exchange of ideas, the connection between attendees, and the celebration of the collective commitment to a better future for the country. More than a film exhibition, the event is conceived as a natural extension of the spirit of the documentary: to converse, question, and think together about the country we are and the one we aspire to be.





