"Women's Mental Health Narratives: Strength in Struggle", a program featuring three powerful films that delve into the stories of women navigating the complexities of mental illness. From their own battles with mental health to the challenges of caring for a loved one, these narratives offer insight, empathy, and resilience.
Documentary - 85 minutes β Chile - 2023
Special Guests:
Dr. Carol Podgorski - Psychiatrist
Dr. Ann EZ Griepp - Psychiatrist
Winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance in 2023, The Eternal Memory tells the story of Augusto and Paulina who have been together and in love for 25 years. Eight years ago, their lives were forever changed by Augustoβs Alzheimerβs diagnosis. As one of Chileβs most prominent cultural commentators and television presenters, Augusto is no stranger to building an archive of memory. Now he turns that work to his own life, trying to hold on to his identity with the help of his beloved Paulina, whose own pre-eminence as a famous actress and Chilean Minister of Culture predates her ceaselessly inventive manner of engaging with her husband. Day by day, the couple face this challenge head-on, relying on the tender affection and sense of humor shared between them that remains, remarkably, fully intact.
Documentary - 80 minutes β USA - 2022
Special Guests:
Deb Guthmann - Researcher
Noel King - Art Therapist
Dr. Robert Pollard - Psychiatrist
BEING MICHELLE follows the astonishing journey of a deaf and disabled woman who survived incarceration and abuse under unimaginable circumstances by a system that refused to accommodate her needs as a deaf person with autism. Michelleβs trajectory changed when she met Kim Law, a blind volunteer life coach who teaches classes to people in prison. Today, outside of prison, Kim and Michelle are doing the difficult work of unraveling Michelleβs history, of telling the story of Michelleβs traumatic childhood and her adverse experiences in the criminal justice system. With the support of Kim, Michelle realizes her own voice and strength. Throughout the film Michelleβs artwork provides her own depiction of the trauma she survived as well as a means to her recovery. Ultimately, BEING MICHELLE is a story of redemption. It is about the bonds between women committed to thriving in a broken system, who are forging a path to healing that can only come through facing the truth and communicating it, together.
Documentary - 73 minutes β Canada - 2023
Special Guests:
Marilyn Farquhar - Film subject
John M. Kubiniec - Quilt Artist
Gary Pudup - Law Enforcement Veteran & Civil Liberties Advocate
Can quilting change the world? A Bullet Pulling Thread tells the story of two siblings from Kitchener who lived radically different lives. Marilyn lived a calm, peaceful life as an award-winning quilter. It was nice. Her brother Barry was a fearless advocate for the homeless, a former drug smuggler, an ex-con. In January 2020, one bullet brought their lives back together. The RCMP killed Barry at his home in Lytton during a mental health crisis. To process her grief, Marilyn creates a series of art quilts called Kairos - a Greek word which means 'an opportune time for action'. A Bullet Pulling Thread follows Marilyn's journey through grief and her quest for answers from administrations that refuse to take responsibility. And as she discovers, grief is a question with no easy answers.
Narrative - 54 minutes β USA - 2022
Director: Dave Quay
Writer & Performer: Padraic Lillis
Trailer: https://vimeo.com/815472783?share=copy
Special Guests:
Dr. Deborah P Healy - Psychiatrist and Psychotherapist
Padraic Lillis - Film writer and performer
Based on Padraic Lillisβ award-winning one man show, Get to Eleven blends live performance elements with narrative cinematic storytelling in an intimate conversation about suicide, addiction and the importance of sharing stories in our darkest moments.
On stage in performance, among friends in conversation, and in the streets and subways of New York City, Padraic offers his own story, and empowers his audiences to deepen their own relationship with life, mental health, and mortality.
Documentary - 89 minutes β Sweden/Denmark - 2022
Director: Jenifer Malmqvist
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=liQuFdH2AIE
Special Guests:
Dr. Lainie Ross - Director the the Paul M. Schyve MD Center for Bioethics
Dr. Peter Wyman - Psychiatry Professor
Sofia, Hedvig and Maja grew up with grief. They were only 8, 10 and 16 years old when their mother took her own life. Today, they are young adults. They have moved on with their lives, but all have struggled in their own ways to cope with their loss.
Now, as they step into adult life, all three feel the need to make sense of their experiences and talk more openly about their motherβs death. In Daughters, we meet the sisters as children and today, as they reflect on what it is like to come of age in the aftermath of trauma.
Documentary - 93 minutes β USA - 2021
Directer / Producer / Cinematographer: Margaret Byrne
Trailer: https://vimeo.com/541810754
Special Guests:
Dr. Robert Weisman - Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester School of Medicine.
Margaret Byrne - Film director/producer
Dr. Larry Guttmacher - Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Medical Humanities at the University of Rochester & Reel Mind's co-founder
In 2015, in the midst of widespread defunding of community mental health care programs across the country, in Chicago, the Cook County Jail has become a default treatment center for people living with mental illness.
While investigating the treatment of detainees, filmmaker Margaret Byrne befriends Angela, Dimitar and Daniel, participants in a mental health court probation program. Their friendship gives each of them the courage to be seen at their most vulnerable as protagonists in this film. In turn, Margaret begins to confront one of the most difficult periods of her life, culminating in a hospitalization for depression.
What begins as a heartfelt desire to accurately portray the lives of Angela, Dimitar and Daniel, forces Margaret to reckon with her own history of mental illness. Margaretβs own hospitalization that occurs during the making of the film, becomes an inspiration to weave her own story into the film. Byrneβs intimate observations of the three, captures the hard-fought triumphs and struggles of living at the intersection of mental illness, poverty, and addiction.
Filmed over five years, their stories expose a system designed for punishment, yet used as a replacement for mental health care. The absence of support takes a toll on family members and friends whom Angela, Dimitar and Daniel provide for and depend on. The resulting stigma and isolation keep them caught in cycles of victory and defeat.
Any Given Day provides deeply personal insight into the necessity of caring relationships, especially when life is at its most difficult.
Live Performance - 100 minutes β USA
Writer/Performer: Adina Taubman
Director: Padraic Lillis
Sound designer: Nina Field
Special Guests:
Padraic Lillis - Director of the play
Adina Taubman - Writer and Performer
Dr. Ann Griepp - Program Director of Psychiatric Residency at Rochester General Hospital, NY.
Dr. Larry Guttmacher - Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Medical Humanities at the University of Rochester.
The Road Back is the very personal story of Adina Taubmanβs journey into and out of a severe depression 12 years ago. With humor and honesty, she tells the story of the experience that transformed her life for the better and led her down a road of discovery to a new, more enlightened sense of self. This entertaining and courageous new play includes helpful strategies for managing depression and anxiety that will inspire anyone who has ever struggled with their mental health.
Adina Taubman and Padraic Lillis previously collaborated on A Line in the Sand, which was awarded Outstanding Production of a Solo Show at both the Midtown International and Planet Connections Theatre Festivals. The show was also awarded the Pulitzer Award for Excellence in Writing and the Meryl Streep Award for Excellence in Acting at the PortFringe Festival and the Best Stage Play Award at the Moondance International Film Festival.
Documentary β 52 minutes β Australia - 2021
A Film by: Damon Smith and Adam Coad
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcKNWDFu4hA
Special Guests:
Dr. Lauren Wadsworth - Founder and Director of the Genesee Valley Psychology (GVP), specializing in OCD, trauma, and DBT
Dr. Larry Guttmacher - Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Medical Humanities at the University of Rochester & Reel Mind's co-founder
Damon Smith has estimated that he has spent around 50,000 hours of his life, so far, participating in absurd ritualistic behaviors associated with his obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). With the help of his anxious friend, Adam Coad, these Australian singer-songwriters share, through original music, preposterous humor, and outlandish animations, the intricate and debilitating nature of what it is like to live and talk about mental illness in a world where itβs ok to talk about a broken arm, but not ok to talk about a broken mind.
Mental As Everything is supported by Regional Arts Victoria and RISE Funding through the Australian Federal Government.
Documentary β 95 minutes β USA - 2021
A film by: Jack Youngelson
Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8t51pshLg0
Special Guests:
Dr. Ellen Poleshuck - Professor of Psychiatry at University of Rochester Chloe Hall - Film Producer
Carolyn Albu - US Veteran
Dr. Larry Guttmacher - Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Medical Humanities at University of Rochester & Reel Mind's co-founder
HERE. IS. BETTER. chronicles the stories of four service men and women, whose grit, smarts, and perseverance are on full display as they allow cameras to witness their most deeply personal, inevitably tense, raw, and honest therapy sessions in real-time. The film seeks to bring understanding to how the human mind responds to trauma, to what a diagnosis of PTSD means, and how PTSD can impact daily life, far removed from a military setting.
While veterans are more than twice as likely to have PTSD than civilians, the root causes of PTSD are wide-ranging. What needs to be understood is that trauma comes in all forms, including the impact of sexual or physical assault, natural disasters, abuse, exposure to violence, serious health issues, or the death of a loved one. As the world still grapples with the collective trauma of the pandemic, the need for effective mental health treatment β free from stigma β is more important than ever.
HERE. IS. BETTER. illustrates how the seemingly impossible mission to heal may become possible as John, Teresa, Jason, and Tabitha choose to face each day with the bravery to seek help and the hope of what help can bring.