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Home - Movies - Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice (2026) – Review and Summary

Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice (2026) – Review and Summary

Sigue Mi Voz, translated to: Follow My Voice, reminds you that no one is difficult to love; you just have to find someone with the tools, capable and willing to do it.

ByAmari Allah Hours Posted onJanuary 3, 2026 2:21 PMJanuary 3, 2026 9:41 PM Hours Updated onJanuary 3, 2026 9:41 PM

Spoiler Alert: This summary and review contains spoilers.


Additionally, some images and text may include affiliate links, meaning we may earn a commission or receive products if you make a purchase.


  • "Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice" Film Details
  • Movie Summary
    • Cast and Characters
      • Klara (Berta Castañé)
      • Kamila (Claudia Traisac)
      • Kang (Jae Woo Yang)
      • Yana (Victoria Oliver)
    • What To Expect In "Follow My Voice" (Rated PG-13) – Content Overview
  • Review and Commentary
    • Highlight(s)
      • Making It Clear Klara and Kang Have Gone Through Things [/100]
      • Making Kang's Feelings and Love An Aide, Not A Cure
      • Young, Vulnerable and Intimate – Not Erotic
    • Low Point(s)
      • Wishing They Gave Yana More Depth [/100]
    • Overall
  • What To Check Out Next

“Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice” Film Details

  • Director(s): Inés Pintor, Pablo Santidrián
  • Writer(s): Inés Pintor, Pablo Santidrián
  • Based On Work By: Ariana Godoy
  • Distributor: Prime Video
  • Runtime: 1 Hour(s) and 41 Minutes
  • Public Release Date (Prime Video): January 2, 2026
  • Genre(s): Drama, Romance, Young Adult
  • Content Rating: Rated PG-13
  • Primary Language: Non-English (Spanish)
  • More Information (External Link)

Movie Summary

Klara has gone through a lot in the last few years. Her family dynamics have changed, her physical and mental health took a notable dip, and when the dust settled, she found herself experiencing agoraphobia for the outside world, it became too much. However, thanks to her sister, nicknamed K2, getting her a therapist, and this social media show hosted by a boy named Kang, Klara slowly but surely wanted to get back into the real world.

But, while some welcomed her with open arms, others reminded her of why she decided not to leave her sister’s apartment for almost three months.

Cast and Characters

Klara (Berta Castañé)

Klara (Berta Castañé) – Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice
  • Check out other productions we’ve covered starring this actor: [Link to Actor’s Tag]
  • Character Summary: Klara is an artist, the younger sister of Kamila, who is currently raising her, and she has gone through not only a major medical situation, but also bullying and other things which overwhelmed her to the point of needing to shut the outside world out for a bit.

Kamila (Claudia Traisac)

Kamila (Claudia Traisac) – Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice
  • Check out other productions we’ve covered starring this actor: [Link to Actor’s Tag]
  • Character Summary: Kamila, often referred to as K2, is Kalara’s older sister and guardian, one of the three Ks, including their mother, who works in the psychology field.

Kang (Jae Woo Yang)

Kang (Jae Woo Yang) – Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice
  • Check out other productions we’ve covered starring this actor: [Link to Actor’s Tag]
  • Character Summary: Kang is a young man who is a middle child, has a contentious relationship with his father, plays soccer, guitar, and sings, but is known by many as the voice behind “Follow My Voice,” a radio show he also live streams, from the nose down.

Yana (Victoria Oliver)

Yana (Victoria Oliver) – Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice
  • Check out other productions we’ve covered starring this actor: [Link to Actor’s Tag]
  • Character Summary: Yana fashions herself as Kang’s next, if not first, girlfriend, due to the time she has invested in him thus far. But what Kang seemingly doesn’t know is that Yana is a bully who isn’t above sabotaging any girl trying to get close to Kang.

What To Expect In “Follow My Voice” (Rated PG-13) – Content Overview

  • Sexual Content:
    • Nudity: Non-Sexual (Context: Chest)
    • Sexual Situations: Implied
  • Miscellaneous:
    • Suicide/ Mental Health Themes: Mention/ Depiction
    • Drinking: Yes

Review and Commentary

Highlight(s)

Making It Clear Klara and Kang Have Gone Through Things [/100]

Both Klara and Kang have backstories that could make those who are a bit more emotional or sensitive teary-eyed. It includes loss, mental health issues, and the jagged path to make a new normal for themselves, mainly by pushing themselves out of their comfort zone. Neither party gets to be that manic pixie ideal, nor a knight in shining armor.

I’d even add that Kang isn’t this boring and perfect guy, but gets to be on equal terms with Klara regarding us meeting his family, learning how and what makes their relationship complicated, and seeing how that informs who he is. Which, for me, considering how many films seem to choose to either make the guy the most understanding, perfect being out there, or dark, moody, mysterious, and seemingly on the path to being abusive, Kang is an outlier in the best way.

You can understand why Klara could fall in love with him, for while her struggles don’t perfectly mirror his, he understands what it is like when life gets hard, and you are challenged to find what specifically works for you to get out of a funk.

Making Kang’s Feelings and Love An Aide, Not A Cure

But, something a lot of people may also like is, as wonderful as Kang is, it is made clear that him coming into Klara’s life doesn’t mean everything is perfect now. She has anxiety, I believe depression, agoraphobia, grief, and all of that isn’t cured because a cute and nice guy is pursuing you. As shown sometimes in the film, that adds onto the weight of your issues, for being seen while feeling in progress, or stuck where you don’t want to be, is nerve-racking.

Klara (Berta Castañé) – Sigue Mi Voz – Follow My Voice

Yet, you can see a healthy relationship is one of the many things Klara wants alongside getting inspiration to paint more, having friends, normalcy, and reasons to find life worth living, despite the possible and promised setbacks. Truly, Follow My Voice, as solemn as it can get, or how it borrows Netflix’s Heartstopper whimsical overlays to represent Klara’s feelings, takes a road that doesn’t feel like it wants to cash in on two attractive actors playing out a popular story. It wants to give you characters to relate to, feel something for, and invest in as they search for how to be happy on their own, and happy enough to have joy to share.

Young, Vulnerable and Intimate – Not Erotic

Too often, when it comes to intimacy, it can feel like it is about seeing young bodies hot and heavy, the performance of it all, like something soft-core you find online. It’s often weird, feels like it is made to tantalize, rather than truly show two people being introduced to the body of another, in a vulnerable moment. Follow My Voice handles things differently.

How Klara reveals herself, especially considering what she went through, feels less like she wants to turn Kang on, and instead, there is the question of, in the state that she is in, can she turn anyone on? It feels like it is flipping things, for I’m sure Klara knows she is attractive, but let’s add to the mix, she hasn’t had her first kiss. So a boy seeing her even partly naked is a big deal, and while she likes him, who, beyond her mother, maybe doctor, sister, if she ever helped her bathe, has seen her body?

Now, with Kang, admittedly, he is not as timid or hesitant about Klara seeing him, I mean, the boy has abs, so, beyond building muscle for sport, I’m sure he has also built them up to be seen. But, that assumption aside, it is cute and wonderful to get the sense of exploration when being intimate with someone new, or for the first time, rather than an almost pornographic scene where it is hot and heavy, quick. Then, the next thing you know, people are doing positions and acting like they are well-versed in sex and what they like doing it.

Low Point(s)

Wishing They Gave Yana More Depth [/100]

One of our biggest issues with Follow My Voice is that it puts so much effort into the leads that everyone else feels shallow in comparison. The friends Kang and Klara have, you learn their names, maybe who one or the other has a crush on, and one character reveals they have an unexpected personal connection to Klara. But, largely, they just act as cheerleaders, and there might be a hint here and there that they have stuff going on outside of what Klara and Kang are dealing with, but the information is limited.

In some ways, you can accept that because a lot of Kang and Klara’s friends seem more like school friends than people they are inviting over to their house. Yana, on the other hand, it is hard to make excuses for her. She appears to be someone Kang had in his life during his darkest days, even fancies herself a factor in his healing as Klara sees Kang currently. Yet, they make her into a generic bully, trying to keep Kang for herself, despite Kang not claiming her romantically or her making any significant move.

It’s frustrating to watch, for with how much Follow My Voice seeks to not go the generic route, balance out the need for a butterfly-inducing romance with showing, as individuals, Kang and Klara have a lot going on, making Yana so superficial felt like a disservice to the story being given. They don’t make it clear that she loved Kang since childhood when he moved from Seoul. Maybe she got so protective because she dreamed of them being together, having kids, and because of all she witnessed, thinking anyone else would hurt him?

This isn’t to say that if they did this, it would justify her bullying Klara and using her worst moments against her. But at the very least, it would paint the picture that Yana is notably hurting rather than embarrassed.

Overall

Our Rating (80/100): Positive (Worth Seeing)

Follow My Voice is a wonderful film that circumvents a lot of the tropes we usually see in young romance, with the exception of the role Yana plays. But, while it is disappointing how that character is developed, you can’t deny how Klara and Kang evolved as individuals, and how they come to be comfortable and affectionate towards one another isn’t a beautiful thing to watch. Not because it sells you a fantasy, but because it sells you something which feels meant to inspire and let you know, you are not hard to love, but simply need to find someone with the tools to be able to do it.

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Listed Under Categories: Movies, Positive (Worth Seeing)

Related Tags: Ariana Godoy, Berta Castañé, Claudia Traisac, Drama, Inés Pintor, Jae Woo Yang, Pablo Santidrián, Prime Video, Rated PG-13, Romance, Victoria Oliver, Young Adult

Amari Allah

Amari is the founder and head writer of Wherever-I-Look.com and has been writing reviews since 2010, with a focus on dramas and comedies.

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