SYNOPSICS
Weed the People (2018) is a English movie. Abby Epstein has directed this movie. Amanda Reiman,Donald Abrams,Bonni Goldstein,Ethan Nadelmann are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2018. Weed the People (2018) is considered one of the best Documentary movie in India and around the world.
Patients suffering from cancer, and their families, struggle against mean-spirited legislation, and the proclaimed goal of Attorney General Jeff Sessions to roll back marijuana reforms in states such as California.
Weed the People (2018) Reviews
Well-made Advocacy Documentary on Medical Marijuana
Weed the People was well-received at Austin's SXSW Film Festival. It is a solid, if somewhat predicable, documentary on the absurdity of medical marijuana prohibition. While it is certainly possible for folks of goodwill to have differing opinions on wisdom of legalizing recreational marijuana, the argument for maintaining medical marijuana as prohibited Schedule 1 drug with zero medical benefits is increasingly ridiculous. The film focuses on telling the stories about half-a-dozen kids with cancer and their parents and the struggles to use marijuana to assist their children. My only concern was that at times they seemed to be delaying traditional treatments in favor of relying on marijuana as an alternative cure. The marijuana advocates often seemed to be experimenting with these kids lives and come dangerously close to practicing medicine without proper training and licensing. While there are certainly medicinal benefits to marijuana particularly in pain amelioration, I'm concerned to see it advocated as cure for cancer and other conditions since that has clearly not been shown by medical research (which the government has unfortunately severely restricted). There was something deeply problematic about the filmmakers use of anecdotal evidence to argue a scientific case. The film was well-made and well-edited. The storytelling was compelling. One questioner in the audience pointed out - correctly I think - that title, while funny, suggested a film that was more about recreational weed than a lot more serious issues involved in treating those with terminal illnesses. They might want to consider a new title or adding a subtitle.
Data that shakes your stigmas and assumptions to their core.
This is not another hyped up, stoner, progressive, liberal leaning documentary. Though many of those have been affective or true, this one takes out every stigma of those movies and presents hard data and facts. This movie is concrete, analytical and authentic. Those three elements bring about awareness of simple data, innovators, open-mindedness and a dense history. It evokes equal feelings of happiness, sadness and confusion. I believe I am very progressive, and this movie blew my mind and added many key tools to my advocacy tool belt. It is on every recommendation list I have. This is a tool and an educational piece, in the deepest most connective manner. Well done.
A beautiful film
This is a beautiful film dealing with one of the toughest subjects there is - childhood cancer - with light and grace and optimism. Well-researched but also utterly compassionate to the families involved. I went in thinking it would make me sob, but I left uplifted. Just beautifully crafted as a film.