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Take Your Pills

  • 2018
  • TV-14
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Take Your Pills (2018)
In a hypercompetitive world, drugs like Adderall offer students, athletes, coders and others a way to do more -- faster and better. This documentary asks: At what cost?
Play trailer2:30
1 Video
3 Photos
Documentary

Every era gets the drug it deserves. In America today, where competition is ceaseless from school to the workforce and everyone wants a performance edge, Adderall and other prescription stim... Read allEvery era gets the drug it deserves. In America today, where competition is ceaseless from school to the workforce and everyone wants a performance edge, Adderall and other prescription stimulants are the defining drugs of this generation.Every era gets the drug it deserves. In America today, where competition is ceaseless from school to the workforce and everyone wants a performance edge, Adderall and other prescription stimulants are the defining drugs of this generation.

  • Director
    • Alison Klayman
  • Stars
    • Ariana
    • Delaney
    • Jasper Holt-Teza
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alison Klayman
    • Stars
      • Ariana
      • Delaney
      • Jasper Holt-Teza
    • 50User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
    • 54Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:30
    Official Trailer

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top Cast44

    Edit
    Ariana
    • Self - College Sophomore
    Delaney
    • Self - College Junior
    Jasper Holt-Teza
    • Self - College Senior
    • (as Jasper)
    Leigh
    • Self - College Senior
    Wendy Brown
    Wendy Brown
    • Self - Political Theorist, UC Berkeley
    Anjan Chatterjee
    Anjan Chatterjee
    • Self - Chair of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania
    Alan Schwarz
    Alan Schwarz
    • Self - Journalist, Author - ADHD Nation
    Nicholas Rasmussen
    Nicholas Rasmussen
    • Self - Author, On Speed
    Nathanael
    • Self - Software Engineer
    Eben Britton
    Eben Britton
    • Self - Former NFL Player
    • (as Eben)
    Brit Britton
    Brit Britton
    • Self - Eben's Wife
    • (as Brit)
    Martha Farah
    Martha Farah
    • Self - Cognitive Neuroscientist, University of Pennsylvania
    Carl Hart
    Carl Hart
    • Self - Chair of Psychology, Columbia University
    Lawrence Diller
    Lawrence Diller
    • Self - Pediatrician, Author - Running on Ritalin
    Steve Hinshaw
    Steve Hinshaw
    • Self - Psychologist, Author - The ADHD Explosion
    Blue Williams
    Blue Williams
    • Self - Artist Management
    • (as Blue)
    Bianka
    • Self - Leigh's Roommate
    Liz Jorgensen
    Liz Jorgensen
    • Self - Psychotherapist
    • Director
      • Alison Klayman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews50

    6.35.8K
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    Featured reviews

    4scarlettmansfield

    Fascinating subject, poor structure

    While the film raises many interesting points, it seems to jump around a lot from those who use it recreationally to excel in their work or studies, to those who have legitimate uses for it. Also, I found it didn't actually do anything to dispel the positive aspects of adderall or discourage those wanting to take it recreationally but it does deter those who want to use it for its actual purpose (ADHD). They just kept seeming to bang on about how great it is to really help you study further and in the wrong hands may encourage more students to try getting hold of the drug.

    Overall, interesting aspects within it - such as the history of these drugs - but lacked a coherent structure and bounced all over the place.
    2zarpthunder

    It's not informative. It's a shock-value documentary

    First off, I was addicted to speed for about a year and a half. Speed is just non-pharma Adderall. I tried Addy, it was great, but way too expensive for my lifestyle. During my depression I had to make friends, do my job, get passing grades, all things I could no longer do normally. I've lived the life they're describing in the film.

    Now there are a few reasons why I gave this film 2 stars.

    1) It's EXTREMELY REPTITIVE

    I honestly couldn't watch the first 20 minutes without being forced to skip sections of the movie. It just pounds into your head that "omg hey everyone, everyone else is doing it and you just don't know, or maybe you do cause you're in college or in business" But it's not true.

    2) It exaggerates immensely

    Not EVERYONE and their mother is doing it. I've been to college, and while it was a fairly conservative college, the level of abuse is so exaggerated. They act like every college kid HAS to do it and DOES do it, and that's just flat out not true. At my school in particular I would say less than 20-25% of kids have even tried Adderall.

    3) It underlines this massive problem and gives no answers

    It briefly skims over nootropics, and vaguely mentions "hey btw Adderall has long term effects! I guess you'll just have to guess what those are because this isn't an informative documentary, this is a shock value documentary!!!!" And that's honestly what pissed me off the most. It's not an informative documentary. It's a shock value documentary.

    All they care about is spreading an exaggerated message that Adderall is being abused. Yes it's a problem. No they don't give you a solution.
    2icesismoody

    Hurr Durr Technology is Bad and Edison Was a Witch

    This documentary, while edited well, is a very shoddily written one. Not only is it incredibly repetitive, with the interviewed individuals all saying some iteration of "I don't have ADHD but wanted to perform better so I abused a substance and voila, I became amazing," but it also does its best to downplay the significance and necessity of the drug it fails to demonize. Very few times in the documentary do they acknowledge that they're talking about substance abuse, not the evils of a perfectly helpful medicine, and they keep describing it as some miracle drug that makes literally every person who takes it ever hyper-productive and jittery instead of a drug that has harmful affects if abused, just like any other medication on the market. Fun fact: people with ADHD have trouble sitting still or paying attention because their frontal lobes aren't as active and may even be physically smaller than people who don't have ADHD. Stimulants help "wake up" their frontal lobes so that they can perform basic tasks like homework, hygiene, driving, and even just taking out the trash sometime in the next six months. A lot of folks with ADHD who don't have access to medication often self-medicate by consuming large amounts of caffeine, a less effective but more accessible stimulant, and when they DO have access to medication, INCLUDING Adderall, they behave and perform like "normal" people, not like people on meth or speed. If this documentary had done more to provide a cautionary tale to those who wish to abuse the drug while also highlighting its usefulness to those who actually need it, it would have been a more rounded and less irrelevant documentary. Unfortunately, it failed to provide, and many MANY people who have ADHD will continue to be stigmatized due to scare tacticians like the folks who put this documentary together.
    kumarihpx

    Highly biased doc conflating meth and other stimulants

    I'm surprised they didn't lump in cold and asthma medicine.

    I'm angry; I think because they said so often that ADHD medicine is "performance enhancing" so often it seemed as if all use is illegitimate! It's an interesting question whether stimulant use in college is a symptom of the American competition problem. Maybe so but it creates a false narrative that 1) Amphetamine is used as often, 2) in the same ways & circumstances, 3) that's it's destructive to the body or mind. Notice you never heard doctors utter any of the inflammatory claims about how Adderall destroys everything it touches. Some people who never had ADHD or were *forced* to take meds as a kid decide they don't want it anymore. It's all anecdotal.

    Finally, the docs starts by showing wobbly images, as if you're tripping. That's not an effect of stimulant medication -- just the opposite in fact. Nor do you zoom or sprout wings and think you can fly.

    I really wish they'd had less lopsided discussion. Maybe show what it's like to experience the memory problems , constant frustration , and utter debilitating blows to one's self-esteem when you try and work very hard and nothing seems to ever go right. For years. They were obviously trying to shock and dissuade people from taking the medicine. I don't know why.. Either they shut their eyes on the facts or they never had them.
    2umasspaulc

    So... What are the Dangers?

    I think this was supposed to be a cautionary documentary about the dangers of legalized amphetamine, but 87 minutes into it and I'm still waiting to hear any negative affects of adderall. I noted Jasper, with minimal medical background, accusing it of "screwing with your liver" and "there was too many enzymes or something". Dr. Farah threw in a sentence about "cardiovascular risks" and "psychotic episodes". Did I miss the other parts in which they explained these risks or offered any case studies or examples?? Huge omission.

    Addiction? Not a danger in itself, just could possibly lead to dangers if you need to undertake extreme measures to obtain more. Dehydration and injuries? Possibly, but that can come with any extreme diet or exercise required at the pro level.

    Really enjoyed the stories but can someone please explain the real detriments to adderall?

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    Related interests

    Dziga Vertov in Man with a Movie Camera (1929)
    Documentary

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Christina Schwarzenegger, daughter of Arnold Schwarzenegger, is the executive producer of the show. Her mom, Maria Shriver is co-producer (executive).
    • Connections
      Features The Simpsons: Brother's Little Helper (1999)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 16, 2018 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Прими таблетки
    • Production companies
      • Motto Pictures
      • Netflix Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 27m(87 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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