Heroin(e)
Heroin(e)
| 03 September 2017 (USA)
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This documentary follows three women — a fire chief, a judge, and a street missionary — as they battle West Virginia's devastating opioid epidemic.

Reviews
Baseshment

I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.

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Afouotos

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

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Sammy-Jo Cervantes

There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.

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Cody

One of the best movies of the year! Incredible from the beginning to the end.

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The_Film_Auditor

Heroin(e) is a short documentary that tells the inspiring story of three different women in West Virginia who help people cope with Heroin addition. The documentary is informative and very emotionally captivating throughout the 39-minute runtime. It displayed some truly heartbreaking events, comeback stories, and some inspiring women. Hats off to the documentary team on this one for taking one of the biggest issues in the United States and showing how it affects so many across the country. This is worth watching for anyone who enjoys documentaries, loves stories about strong women, or is interested in the drug epidemic.

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MisterWhiplash

Theres one small moment that says it all: in the convenience store as five EMS workers treat an OD guy on the floor, off to the right but not so far in the background, people continue to buy their sodas and the convenience store employee pays it zero mind (and the camera being there has nothing to do with it). This is business as usual, and it's not unlike how America also is looking at school shootings: just another fucking day in this country.Although Heroin(e) may not show us too much more than any given (recent) episode of Intervention, the focus on these three women - the fire dept employee (an ex nurse who as she says will always have it in her to help people) and the drug court judge (far kinder than most judges id imagine) - makes it a unique and wholly important cinematic document of a crisis.

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bettycjung

10/18/17. A somewhat whitewashed version of the current opiate epidemic that some may find inspirational. While it gives viewers an inside look at what first responders must deal with when it comes to overdoses, it paints a somewhat skewed picture of those addicted. Those individuals highlighted as drug users seem a lot more cooperative than they really are. If they were this cooperative there wouldn't be such a big problem. Maybe it'll raise awareness. The one to watch is FBI's "Chasing the Dragon" on Youtube.

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

Netflix' "Heroine" or "Heroin(e)" is an American 40-minute documentary in the English language from this year, very new very fresh 2017 release. The focus here is on people overdosing in the state of West Virginia and on 3 people working on getting the situation under control. Now from my very personal perspective, it is true that drug addicts are miserable and can be felt sorry for, but you have to keep in mind that the first time, the very first time they were using, it happened because they agreed to and made a completely conscious decision instead of saying no. I'd rather spare my sympathy for those who really aren't 1% to blame for their (possibly life-threatening) misery like innocent victims of accidents. That aside, I also had many issues with the approach given here by Elaine McMillion Sheldon. It is about a serious subject yes, but it's feel-good material of the worst kind in my opinion. The ways in which the state officials and the addicts are so close, keep hugging etc. the state officials are so close too with each other, the comedy, the applauding at the courtroom, the podium tears etc. In my opinion hardly anything felt authentic and realistic about these 40 minutes, which is a gigantic problem because this is the area where the (should) want to deliver the most. Everything feels scripted and the very last scene was the perfect example as the phone rings in an interview and she has to get out right away because there is another OD situation. You may mistake it for the filmmaker being humble and putting her movie second to the important work of the protagonists, but I am just not buying it. The judge was probably the least likable in here. The other ones were at least doing a somewhat honorable job that is good for them, but not for general audiences in my opinion. At least not the way it was presented here..That said, I still believe that this film can be a major contender during the 2017/2018 awards season and an Oscar for Best Documentary short would not surprise me at all. It is about a national, maybe global, contemporary problem set against the background of an American town in a very specific scenario. It tries to deliver heart and emotion, drama and situational comedy and I think it could be exactly what the Academy is going for. I still hope they manage to see beyond how shallow and staged it all feels and in my opinion, the quality is close to an insult to the really serious subject that would have deserved a far better execution. 4 stars out of 10 is still fairly generous in my opinion and that's all I can give this film. The outcome is as disappointing as the really simple play on words in the title. It's one for simple audiences. I give it a thumbs-down. Don't watch.

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