2-Crimes continue in this story of the film, full of interesting events where a young girl and a Latino religious girl, living in a dangerous part of the city, begin to be influenced by visions. Just as a police detective must start investigating the murder of a neighborhood partner. But what the detective will face to investigate for his friend is very difficult.
To call it disjointed is an understatement: Exposed is unintelligible. It feels like two completely different movies inelegantly Frankensteined together.
In certain mutilated pictures, you can detect the lineaments of greatness: Consider Orson Welles's "The Magnificent Ambersons." Here, that's not the case.