Yes, it does. It goes into sufficient detail. Watch it again if you have to.
I have seen the film three times. It does not show what it pretends to show. I wish it did.
True the Vote purchased one petabyte of geotracking data -- a gigantic collection of numbers -- and somehow turned those numbers into mule maps. That was an extraordinary achievement, yet 2000 Mules tells us nothing about how it was accomplished. The film shows no video of the TTV computer labs. There are no interviews with the technicians who did all that work. We are told nothing about the expertise of those technicians. Were they even slightly qualified to do the work? Had they done similar work in the past? Exactly what processes did they use to get all that data to reveal its secrets? GIVE US THE DETAILS! Did they consider alternative explanations for the geospatial data other than TTV's mule hypothesis? Where is the critique of TTV's results by an independent expert in geospatial data analysis?
TTV's and D'Souza's answer to all that: "Trust us." Well, I don't trust them.
TTV and D'Souza should be providing details galore to convincingly demonstrate that they had proved their mule hypothesis. Instead we get D'Souza repeating, "Geospatial tracking can be very accurate!"
I think the details are being withheld because they don't exist.