IMDb RATING
7.7/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Filmmaker Dana Perry documents the life of her son, Evan, a 15-year-old who committed suicide.Filmmaker Dana Perry documents the life of her son, Evan, a 15-year-old who committed suicide.Filmmaker Dana Perry documents the life of her son, Evan, a 15-year-old who committed suicide.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Photos
Evan Scott Perry
- Self
- (archive footage)
Scott Perry
- Self - Evan's Uncle
- (archive footage)
Beatrice Perry
- Self - Scott's Mother
- (as Beatrice 'Beati' Perry)
Hart Perry Sr.
- Self - Scott's Father
- (archive footage)
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Featured reviews
1 Star purely for the psychiatrist!!
I don't know how on earth no one in the family could tell how horrendous the Evan's "psychiatrist" was. I'm NAD but he is an absolute quack and shouldn't be practicing and treating patients. He calls Evan "crazy" multiple times, allows his patient to dictate whether he will take his lithium for bipolar disorder, stating "he doesn't need it anymore". It's not a curable mental illness wtf!! Are you kidding me?!!?! He is partly to blame for Evan's death and I'm so sorry to his family. He's up there with Dr. Death. He had the nerve to be on this documentary... shame on you, Ladd Speigel!!!!
Life goes on, but not as you wanted or planned
Documentary tells about the life and end for Evan Perry, a boy that suffered with depression from his childhood and did suicide at the age of 15. Story builds up from him having suicidal thoughts and plans to kill himself at primary school all the way to getting better and having a better phase in secondary school. We report his life getting better even to the phase that his lithium medication dosage gets lowered to handle less side effect symptoms. And then there was an open Window and a note on laptop. The rest is silence. Expect to cry.
The Rest is Silence...
Unexpectedly rich documentary of Evan Perry, a peculiar, bipolar young boy from a prosperous New York home who harbored a fascination with death at an early age, eventually committing suicide in 2005 at age 15 by jumping from a window in his apartment building. As directed by his mother Dana Perry, with photography by father Hart Perry, this film would seem to be an unrelieved downer from the outset (beginning with home movies from "a happier time", leading into interviews from understandably shaken relatives). But, as the material is vividly laid out, we learn a great deal more about this strange kid other than his preoccupation with dying (we pretty much watch him grow up through photographs and video footage, starting with Evan post-birth in the hospital room). The child's family and teachers--and one amusingly looped, exasperated psychiatrist straight out of a Paul Mazursky comedy--recount their dealings with Evan in succinct fashion, and there's even a surprising highlight: a grade school play about death, written by Evan, which features better acting by the students than what we get in most television shows. A deeply-felt journey, moving yet with a tough core. **1/2 from ****
Tough to get through but very well done.
Heart wrenching film very well done by parents who have lived through THE WORST thing that could happen From the surface this child could not have had a better life. Well off, attentive parents, and had all the advantages. Yet he could not get past the darkness inside him. So chilling that he manifested these behaviors at such an early age.
To the commentator who was critical of the psychiatrist....you cant assume all bi-polar people have the same experience. Im glad you know some who have managed to lead normal lives and respond to medication and therapy. but I personally know of two bipolar people, early 30s, both highly educated, who are unable to function as independent adults because of bipolar disorder. They have both had solid access to medical attention. I think sometimes the disorder is just too heavy. I think also there are personality traits outside the bipolar disorder that are specific to some individuals which exaggerate or enhance the challenges.
To the commentator who was critical of the psychiatrist....you cant assume all bi-polar people have the same experience. Im glad you know some who have managed to lead normal lives and respond to medication and therapy. but I personally know of two bipolar people, early 30s, both highly educated, who are unable to function as independent adults because of bipolar disorder. They have both had solid access to medical attention. I think sometimes the disorder is just too heavy. I think also there are personality traits outside the bipolar disorder that are specific to some individuals which exaggerate or enhance the challenges.
10aci-4
RIP lil guy
Not an easy movie to watch ,but you really get the picture what its like about these things.
Poor dude.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Una vida truncada
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $350,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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