Take Your Pills ** / *****
Directed by: Alison Klayman.
Alison
Klayman’s Take Your Pills is an advocacy documentary that basically argues –
not incorrectly – that as a society, we are over medicating our children – one
drugs like Ritalin and Adderall, which is essentially speed. We get them hooked
on the drugs, that help keep them alert and focused, with no real plan to ever
get them off the drugs – and as a result, we have a society of children on the
drugs, who grow into adults who are still on the drugs. The most striking
moment in the film comes late, when a college senior says that when they get
out into the world, they don’t think they’ll continue to use Adderall – that
they’ll be able to leave work behind at work, not like in university where you
have to stay up all night to study, and then immediately cuts to an adult who
says he takes Adderall for work only, and if he didn’t have to work, he’d stop
taking the drug. It’s a moment that rings true, because everyone is always
coming up with excuses why they “need” something they want, but that at some
point in the future, they will stop.
Had
the film had more moments like that, it would probably work better than it
ultimately does. My tolerance for this type of advocacy documentary usually is
relatively low, and Take Your Pills is an example as to why they don’t work
well for me. While director Alison Klayman at least gives people the
opportunity to defend the use of these drugs – particularly doctors who don’t
see a problem prescribing it, or in one ill-advised side story, a company who
sells non-prescription versions of the drugs – it’s clear that Klayman doesn’t
really agree with them, and rushes them off the screen rather quickly. She is,
in effect, paying lip service to that side, while spending most of the rest of
the time condemning the over prescription of the drugs. It’s a position that I
happen to agree with – not every restless kid needs to be on the drug, and
because so many kids are on it, it creates a culture where something as serious
as giving your child a prescription drug on a permanent basis is seen as
routine. Yet Klayman casts her net so wide in finding the stories of those
effected, and the doctors and researchers who have something to say about it,
the personal stories really do get lost. In the case of the trees getting lost
for the forest.
That
is a shame, because there are some interesting people in the documentary – the
former NFL player, who started taking Adderall as a professional, and needed to
get a doctor’s note, so it would be considered a performance enhancing drug for
instance. Or the college artist who has been on it since third grade, and it
bitter about it – and wants off of it, and his mother, who expressed at least
some regret, while still defending that position. The movie has quick sequences
dealing with use of the drug at university in general – where kids with
prescriptions sell it to those who don’t or on Wall Street, where is has
replaced cocaine as the stimulant of choice. All of these stories could be docs
of their own – at least short ones – and perhaps would have been more
interesting than Take Your Pills ends up being.
What
we do get is a mountain of statistics thrown at us – and as much as Klayman tries
to jazz up the style in those presentations, there is only so much you can do
with, and a lot of doctors and researchers explaining the effects, the dangers,
and how similar the drugs really are to meth. They even compare it to the
opioid crisis in America.
The
problem ultimately is though that Klayman doesn’t really find anything new
here. This has been a well-documented problem for years now, so Klayman’s doc
feels like it’s too little too late. There is some good stuff, but it’s buried
under a mountain of good intentions.
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