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All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
Overlook Pick

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed

72
User Score163 ratings
TMDB 7.216+20222h 2mEnglish
Documentary

Synopsis

The life of internationally renowned artist and activist Nan Goldin is told through her slideshows, intimate interviews, ground-breaking photography, and rare footage of her personal fight to hold the Sackler family accountable for the overdose crisis.

Director
Laura PoitrasFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Participant1 production companies
Release
November 23, 2022Released
Box Office
$1M

Top Cast

8 of 20
Nan Goldin
Nan Goldin
Self
Marina Berio
Self
Noemi Bonazzi
Self
Harry Cullen
Self
Megan Kapler
Self
Annatina Miescher
Self
Mike Quinn
Self
Patrick Radden Keefe
Self

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Oct 20, 2022

I have to say that I was really disappointed with this. I had expected a serious critique on the way in which the highly addictive opioid "OxyContin" had come to impact on the lives of millions of American citizens. Instead, we get a rather muddled chronology of the life of activist and journalist Nan Goldin, interspersed by the odd demonstration aimed at destroying the reputation of the Sackler family - all of the founders of which (and therefore the principal collectors of the art and the original altruists) had been long dead. We are expected to have far too high a degree of knowledge here for the scientific elements to make sense. It, at no stage, offers us any explanation as to what the drug is, how and why it was prescribed - what was it supposed to do? Nor do we have any contributions from the US Federal Drug Administration or from the medical profession as to just how this was being prescribed by qualified medical personnel the nation over, without any ongoing assessment of it's effects nor any signs of intervention from national - or state - medical authorities. It takes far too simplistic an approach to these crucial and equally negligent issues, is scant on detail and in the end comes across as little better than a one-woman-rant. The fact that Goldin herself led a fascinating and interesting life may well be the subject of a documentary in it's own right - she was an hugely creative lady; but as a documentary on an shocking issue that could have informed me, I found it seriously lacking and one-sided. There can be no doubt that this drug, amongst others, caused abject misery to millions - but this really does miss an opportunity to educate and inform and maybe even to demonstrate the ineffectiveness of the policing authorities and the courts when it comes to dealing with large-scale abuses. Pity, had it laid out arguments and offered us something of a balance it could have been so very much more interesting.

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