Every summer, a horde of professional Santas, Mrs. Clauses and elves descend on a campsite in the New Hampshire woods to learn the tricks of their trade. But this year is different. The organizers, members of the one-hundred strong New England Santa Society, have decided to tackle a complicated and historic problem – the lack of diversity in the Santa industry. They decide to enlist a Black Santa named Chris, a Santa with a disability named Fin, and a transgender Santa named Levi, each with their own surprising Santa origin story. Meanwhile, the Mrs. Claus delegation, led by veteran Dianne, is becoming more outspoken in its calls for equal billing and pay. The arrival of the new Santas sparks a reckoning about what it means to embody the beloved role model and cultural icon. After graduation, the Clauses draw on their camp experiences to affect change in their communities. But they...
- 11/4/2022
- by Hollywood Outbreak
- HollywoodOutbreak.com
There’s frequent talk in the new FX docuseries “Children of the Underground” about the misinformation that often accompanies allegations of abuse. Director Gabriela Cowperthwaite showcases a court landscape where judges aren’t given vetted information, where women who show too much emotion are “hysterical,” and where husbands don’t “fit the part” of a man who could abuse his children. It’s impossible to watch this series about sexual abuse and not see shades of a recent celebrity court trial, or the numerous allegations women have brought forth about powerful men.
And, really, that’s the point of “Children of the Underground.” Too often the abused, mainly women, are disbelieved in favor of someone who looks more “rational” and “stable” to those in power. Mainly men. Cowperthwaite takes the same blunt approach that she did in exposing the mistreatment of Orca whales in her 2013 documentary “Blackfish” and applies it...
And, really, that’s the point of “Children of the Underground.” Too often the abused, mainly women, are disbelieved in favor of someone who looks more “rational” and “stable” to those in power. Mainly men. Cowperthwaite takes the same blunt approach that she did in exposing the mistreatment of Orca whales in her 2013 documentary “Blackfish” and applies it...
- 8/8/2022
- by Kristen Lopez
- Indiewire
Norma McCorvey, the woman known as Jane Roe in the U.S. Supreme Court ruling Roe v. Wade, revealed before her death in 2017 that she was lying when she began publicly supporting the anti-abortion movement. McCorvey, who helped lead the fight to legalize abortion in the early 1970s, admitted that she had been paid to […]
The post Evidence That Gloria Allred Coached Client Jane Roe to Lie Resurfaces After Scotus Overturns Roe v. Wade appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Evidence That Gloria Allred Coached Client Jane Roe to Lie Resurfaces After Scotus Overturns Roe v. Wade appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 6/28/2022
- by Karen Benardello
- ShockYa
Gloria Allred has been abusing the law since she represented Jane Roe aka Norma McCorvey, in the historic Roe versus Wade decision. The Supreme Court recently unraveled Allred’s landmark case calling it “egregious conduct”. The “egregious conduct” was Allred’s coercing witnesses to overturn the Texas anti abortion law. The documentary Aka Jane Roe is put […]
The post Jane Roe Says Attorney Gloria Allred Paid Me & Told Me to Lie in Roe Versus Wade appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Jane Roe Says Attorney Gloria Allred Paid Me & Told Me to Lie in Roe Versus Wade appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 6/26/2022
- by Grady Owen
- ShockYa
Click here to read the full article.
Meadow Walker has shared her own abortion story while denouncing the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade on Friday.
The 23-year-old model and daughter of late actor Paul Walker took to her Instagram to mark June 24 as “a huge setback in history” that has led to “a profound injustice to women across the United States.”
“There are countless women who have struggled with making the decision to have an abortion,” she continued, before opening up about her own experience. Walker shared that she underwent an abortion in 2020 during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.
“I too have battled with the choice but in 2020, when the world was collapsing during the pandemic, I sought an abortion,” the message reads. “It was a very private and personal experience — the way it should be. I was lucky enough to have a...
Meadow Walker has shared her own abortion story while denouncing the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade on Friday.
The 23-year-old model and daughter of late actor Paul Walker took to her Instagram to mark June 24 as “a huge setback in history” that has led to “a profound injustice to women across the United States.”
“There are countless women who have struggled with making the decision to have an abortion,” she continued, before opening up about her own experience. Walker shared that she underwent an abortion in 2020 during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.
“I too have battled with the choice but in 2020, when the world was collapsing during the pandemic, I sought an abortion,” the message reads. “It was a very private and personal experience — the way it should be. I was lucky enough to have a...
- 6/25/2022
- by Abbey White
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Rightwing faces, including Jon Voight, Stacey Dash and Tomi Lahren, join forces for a shoddy new drama purporting to tell the truth behind a major ruling
Nick Loeb and Cathy Allyn believe you’ve been lied to about the landmark supreme court case Roe v Wade – a decision that protected a woman’s right to choose. In a controversial new movie named after the trial, the co-directors want to explain how decision was rigged; how a Jewish doctor (Loeb is of Jewish descent himself) leveraged abortion into a money making scheme; how the abortion rights advocate Lawrence Lader (Jamie Kennedy) concocted a plan to puppeteer two inexperienced female lawyers to prey on a supposedly desperate bumpkin in Norma McCorvey (Summer Joy Campbell) – the Roe in Roe v Wade – to weaponize her to an unsuspecting court system. And they want to spew this deeply biased anti-abortion malarkey as inartfully as possible.
Nick Loeb and Cathy Allyn believe you’ve been lied to about the landmark supreme court case Roe v Wade – a decision that protected a woman’s right to choose. In a controversial new movie named after the trial, the co-directors want to explain how decision was rigged; how a Jewish doctor (Loeb is of Jewish descent himself) leveraged abortion into a money making scheme; how the abortion rights advocate Lawrence Lader (Jamie Kennedy) concocted a plan to puppeteer two inexperienced female lawyers to prey on a supposedly desperate bumpkin in Norma McCorvey (Summer Joy Campbell) – the Roe in Roe v Wade – to weaponize her to an unsuspecting court system. And they want to spew this deeply biased anti-abortion malarkey as inartfully as possible.
- 3/25/2021
- by Robert Daniels
- The Guardian - Film News
In 1973 Texas cleaning woman Norma McCorvey became the most famous woman in America when her attempt to obtain an abortion became the impetus for the court case known as Roe v. Wade. The case is one that everyone has an opinion on and it is near impossible to divorce personal feelings from a given work, whether that be a book or documentary on the subject. So director Nick Sweeney’s attempt at neutrality with his documentary “Aka Jane Roe” is admirable, but at times impossibly baffling.
“Aka Jane Roe” sells itself as an attempt for Jane Roe herself, McCorvey, to set the record straight about her life. McCorvey was a poor woman who’d already had a child, had a second on the way, and became the face of the biggest court case to affect women since the 19th Amendment. After that, she became a born again Christian, working with...
“Aka Jane Roe” sells itself as an attempt for Jane Roe herself, McCorvey, to set the record straight about her life. McCorvey was a poor woman who’d already had a child, had a second on the way, and became the face of the biggest court case to affect women since the 19th Amendment. After that, she became a born again Christian, working with...
- 5/22/2020
- by Kristen Lopez
- Indiewire
For obvious reasons, this Memorial Day weekend is going to be a bit different from previous years. But the good news is, you won’t have to experience Fomo for skipping out on the barbeque-and-beach days in order to stay inside and watch TV instead. That decision has been made for you. There will even be some live sports to watch, like a Nascar race and a socially-distanced golf match between Tom Brady, Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Peyton Manning. So allow us to list out the best options for what to watch (or stream) on TV (or your laptop) this weekend.
Friday: “The Big Fib” on Disney+
This game show with kid contestants premieres Friday on Disney’s new streaming service. Hosted by Yvette Nicole Brown and featuring Rhys Darby as her robot sidekick, C.L.I.V.E., the kids must decide whether the information they’re being told is fact or fib.
Friday: “The Big Fib” on Disney+
This game show with kid contestants premieres Friday on Disney’s new streaming service. Hosted by Yvette Nicole Brown and featuring Rhys Darby as her robot sidekick, C.L.I.V.E., the kids must decide whether the information they’re being told is fact or fib.
- 5/22/2020
- by Margeaux Sippell
- The Wrap
Norma McCorvey, better known by her pseudonym Jane Roe, drops a bombshell near the end of the new FX documentary about her life.
In what she calls her “deathbed confession,” McCorvey admits that anti-abortion groups paid her to switch over to their side in the abortion debate, around 20 years after she became a pro-choice icon for being the plaintiff in the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade.
Nick Sweeney, the director of “Aka Jane Roe,” says he had no idea that McCorvey was about to make such a dramatic confession, and that it represents her “subverting everyone’s expectations one last time.”
McCorvey’s story is one of tragedy, abuse and plenty of contradictions. The Australian director, who recently recovered from a “pretty nasty bout” of coronavirus, spoke with Variety about what McCorvey was really like, and the timing of his documentary amid seemingly growing threats to Roe v.
In what she calls her “deathbed confession,” McCorvey admits that anti-abortion groups paid her to switch over to their side in the abortion debate, around 20 years after she became a pro-choice icon for being the plaintiff in the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade.
Nick Sweeney, the director of “Aka Jane Roe,” says he had no idea that McCorvey was about to make such a dramatic confession, and that it represents her “subverting everyone’s expectations one last time.”
McCorvey’s story is one of tragedy, abuse and plenty of contradictions. The Australian director, who recently recovered from a “pretty nasty bout” of coronavirus, spoke with Variety about what McCorvey was really like, and the timing of his documentary amid seemingly growing threats to Roe v.
- 5/21/2020
- by Will Thorne
- Variety Film + TV
This spring, FX’s “Mrs. America” has depicted the fiery intellectual battles among the modern feminist movement, with Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan, Shirley Chisholm, and Bella Abzug ricocheting against one another and against a conservative backlash led by Phyllis Schlafly. These women are relentlessly articulate, strategic, with crystalline points of view about what they want to achieve for themselves and for all women. They comprise a group in which “Jane Roe” — at the center of perhaps the most crucial of victories for the 20th-century feminist movement — would have no place.
Norma McCorvey, the subject of the new documentary “Aka Jane Roe,” is a canny observer of her own experiences — which mainly consist of having been moved around the gameboard of American politics as a pawn. Speaking to director Nick Sweeney’s camera from her nursing home in the months before her 2017 death, McCorvey describes the experience of being drawn in...
Norma McCorvey, the subject of the new documentary “Aka Jane Roe,” is a canny observer of her own experiences — which mainly consist of having been moved around the gameboard of American politics as a pawn. Speaking to director Nick Sweeney’s camera from her nursing home in the months before her 2017 death, McCorvey describes the experience of being drawn in...
- 5/20/2020
- by Daniel D'Addario
- Variety Film + TV
The late Norma McCorvey, better known by her pseudonym “Jane Roe” which she used in the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade, has revealed that she was paid by anti-abortion groups to speak out against the law that her case created in an upcoming documentary.
Portions of “Aka Jane Roe,” which premieres Friday on FX, were filmed in the months prior to McCorvey’s death in February 2017. In it, McCorvey gives a “deathbed confession” saying she pivoted to speaking against abortion rights because she received payment from groups such as Operation Rescue.
“I was the big fish,” McCorvey says. “I think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and they’d put me out in front of the cameras and tell me what to say. That’s what I’d say… It was all an act. I did it well too. I am a good actress.
Portions of “Aka Jane Roe,” which premieres Friday on FX, were filmed in the months prior to McCorvey’s death in February 2017. In it, McCorvey gives a “deathbed confession” saying she pivoted to speaking against abortion rights because she received payment from groups such as Operation Rescue.
“I was the big fish,” McCorvey says. “I think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and they’d put me out in front of the cameras and tell me what to say. That’s what I’d say… It was all an act. I did it well too. I am a good actress.
- 5/19/2020
- by J. Kim Murphy
- Variety Film + TV
Norma McCorvey, the once-anonymous “Jane Roe” in the landmark Roe v. Wade Supreme Court case, revealed she only switched sides to oppose abortion rights because she was being paid by anti-abortion groups.
“I think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and they put me out in front of the cameras and told me what to say. That’s what I’d say,” McCorvey, who died in 2017, admitted in FX’s upcoming documentary “Aka Jane Roe.” “I did it well, too. I am a good actress. Of course, I’m not acting now.”
In 1970, McCorvey filed a lawsuit requesting that she have the right to safely and legally end a pregnancy in Texas. The case ultimately made it to the Supreme Court and, in 1973, the court ruled 7-2 that citizens had the constitutional right to an abortion.
Also Read: Mark Ruffalo Defends Abortion Rights in Poignant Video Honoring Roe v.
“I think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and they put me out in front of the cameras and told me what to say. That’s what I’d say,” McCorvey, who died in 2017, admitted in FX’s upcoming documentary “Aka Jane Roe.” “I did it well, too. I am a good actress. Of course, I’m not acting now.”
In 1970, McCorvey filed a lawsuit requesting that she have the right to safely and legally end a pregnancy in Texas. The case ultimately made it to the Supreme Court and, in 1973, the court ruled 7-2 that citizens had the constitutional right to an abortion.
Also Read: Mark Ruffalo Defends Abortion Rights in Poignant Video Honoring Roe v.
- 5/19/2020
- by J. Clara Chan
- The Wrap
Norma McCorvey, who used the pseudonym “Jane Roe” in the landmark reproductive rights case Roe v. Wade, said that the reason she was an anti-abortion activist later in life was because she was paid. The revelation comes in the new FX documentary Aka Jane Roe, which premieres this Friday, May 22nd, and was also reported by the Los Angeles Times.
Aka Jane Roe was directed by Nick Sweeney, who conducted a series of interviews with McCorvey before she died in February 2017 at the age of 69. In the film, she reportedly...
Aka Jane Roe was directed by Nick Sweeney, who conducted a series of interviews with McCorvey before she died in February 2017 at the age of 69. In the film, she reportedly...
- 5/19/2020
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
In FX’s first documentary Aka Jane Roe, the real-life Norma McCorvey, who was known as plaintiff “Jane Roe” in the historic Roe v. Wade Supreme Court case, tells us that what she said in the feature is her “deathbed confession”. During the docu, she dropped a bomb, confessing that she went from pro-choice to pro-life because she was paid.
In one jaw-dropping part of the Nick Sweeney-directed docu, McCorvey, who was interviewed a few months before her death in 2017 was asked if she was being used as a trophy by anti-abortion groups. “I was the big fish,” she admitted. “I think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and they’d put me out in front of the cameras and tell me what to say. That’s what I’d say.”
She gave an example of what she was told to say as the “former Jane Roe,...
In one jaw-dropping part of the Nick Sweeney-directed docu, McCorvey, who was interviewed a few months before her death in 2017 was asked if she was being used as a trophy by anti-abortion groups. “I was the big fish,” she admitted. “I think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and they’d put me out in front of the cameras and tell me what to say. That’s what I’d say.”
She gave an example of what she was told to say as the “former Jane Roe,...
- 5/19/2020
- by Dino-Ray Ramos
- Deadline Film + TV
In 1973, the historic Roe v. Wade case set the precedent that a woman’s right to have an abortion is protected by the U.S. Constitution. The plaintiff at the center of that case was Norma McCorvey, better known by the legal pseudonym “Jane Roe.” But later in her life, McCorvey would do a complete 180. She became a […]
The post Roe v. Wade Documentary ‘Aka Jane Roe’ to Debut on FX and Hulu appeared first on /Film.
The post Roe v. Wade Documentary ‘Aka Jane Roe’ to Debut on FX and Hulu appeared first on /Film.
- 3/7/2020
- by Hoai-Tran Bui
- Slash Film
In today’s TV news roundup, MTV announced the premiere date and cast for the 35th season of “The Challenge,” and the CW announces premiere dates for three summer shows.
Casting
MTV has revealed the lineup for season 35 of the reality-competition series “The Challenge,” dubbed “The Challenge: Total Madness.” To commemorate the landmark season, the 28-member cast features a mix of series veterans and newcomers competing in challenges for a million-dollar prize. Among the veterans are Mattie Breaux, Tula “Big T” Fazakerley and Jennifer West, each back for their second-ever challenge; third-time challengers Josh Martinez, Dee Nguyen, Melissa Reeves, Rogan O’Connor and Stephen Bear; fourth-time challenger Tori Deal; fifth-time challengers Kailah Casillas and Kyle Christie; sixth-time challengers Nelson Thomas and Jordan Wisely; seventh-time challengers Ashley Mitchell and Cory Wharton; and eighth-time challenger Jenna Compono. Additionally, mega-veterans such as 13-time challengers Aneesa Ferreira and Wes Bergmann, 17-time challenger Ct Tamburello; and Johnny “Bananas” Devenanzio,...
Casting
MTV has revealed the lineup for season 35 of the reality-competition series “The Challenge,” dubbed “The Challenge: Total Madness.” To commemorate the landmark season, the 28-member cast features a mix of series veterans and newcomers competing in challenges for a million-dollar prize. Among the veterans are Mattie Breaux, Tula “Big T” Fazakerley and Jennifer West, each back for their second-ever challenge; third-time challengers Josh Martinez, Dee Nguyen, Melissa Reeves, Rogan O’Connor and Stephen Bear; fourth-time challenger Tori Deal; fifth-time challengers Kailah Casillas and Kyle Christie; sixth-time challengers Nelson Thomas and Jordan Wisely; seventh-time challengers Ashley Mitchell and Cory Wharton; and eighth-time challenger Jenna Compono. Additionally, mega-veterans such as 13-time challengers Aneesa Ferreira and Wes Bergmann, 17-time challenger Ct Tamburello; and Johnny “Bananas” Devenanzio,...
- 3/5/2020
- by J. Kim Murphy
- Variety Film + TV
FX Networks has set their first documentary feature Aka Roe which puts the spotlight on the real-life Norma McCorvey who was known as “Jane Roe” in the historic Roe v. Wade Supreme Court case. The docu will premiere May 22 at 9 pm Et/Pt on FX and will be available the following day on FX on Hulu.
The film follows the true story of McCorvey in the landmark ruling on abortion rights. The docu will feature her final series of interviews prior to her death and reveals the unvarnished truth behind her journey from pro-choice to pro-life and beyond – in what she calls her “deathbed confession.
Aka Jane Roe is the latest addition to FX’s growing slate of non-fiction series and documentary features. The network is currently airing the first season of The Weekly, a narrative docuseries with The New York Times, and the four-part docuseries The Most Dangerous Animal of All...
The film follows the true story of McCorvey in the landmark ruling on abortion rights. The docu will feature her final series of interviews prior to her death and reveals the unvarnished truth behind her journey from pro-choice to pro-life and beyond – in what she calls her “deathbed confession.
Aka Jane Roe is the latest addition to FX’s growing slate of non-fiction series and documentary features. The network is currently airing the first season of The Weekly, a narrative docuseries with The New York Times, and the four-part docuseries The Most Dangerous Animal of All...
- 3/4/2020
- by Dino-Ray Ramos
- Deadline Film + TV
FX has acquired its first feature-length documentary, which centers on the woman at the center of the landmark Roe v. Wade Supreme Court case.
Aka Jane Roe, which is set to premiere May 22 on FX, adds to the cabler's growing library of nonfiction programming that includes the series The Weekly and The Most Dangerous Animal of All, which debuts Friday. The film features interviews with Norma McCorvey, the "Jane Roe" in the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion nationwide.
Directed by Nick Sweeney (Born in the Wrong Body), Aka Jane Roe traces McCorvey's journey from pro-choice to pro-life and ...
Aka Jane Roe, which is set to premiere May 22 on FX, adds to the cabler's growing library of nonfiction programming that includes the series The Weekly and The Most Dangerous Animal of All, which debuts Friday. The film features interviews with Norma McCorvey, the "Jane Roe" in the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion nationwide.
Directed by Nick Sweeney (Born in the Wrong Body), Aka Jane Roe traces McCorvey's journey from pro-choice to pro-life and ...
A trailer for the controversial film from rightwing entrepreneur Nick Loeb references Brett Kavanaugh’s appointment to the supreme court
The first footage has emerged of Roe v Wade, a controversial anti-abortion film, which is part of conservative efforts to overturn the landmark 1973 Us supreme court ruling that deemed abortion a fundamental right under the Us constitution.
Co-written and co-directed by entrepreneur Nick Loeb, who sued his former partner Sofía Vergara in an attempt to gain control over their frozen embryos, Roe v Wade is an explicitly pro-life statement that its makers claimed was shot in secret fearing harassment from pro-choice activists. This is an entirely separate project from one recently announced by UK producers Alison Owen and Debra Hayward, which will focus on lawyer Sarah Weddington, who represented “Roe” Aka Norma McCorvey, the Texan woman who challenged state law denying her an abortion.
The first footage has emerged of Roe v Wade, a controversial anti-abortion film, which is part of conservative efforts to overturn the landmark 1973 Us supreme court ruling that deemed abortion a fundamental right under the Us constitution.
Co-written and co-directed by entrepreneur Nick Loeb, who sued his former partner Sofía Vergara in an attempt to gain control over their frozen embryos, Roe v Wade is an explicitly pro-life statement that its makers claimed was shot in secret fearing harassment from pro-choice activists. This is an entirely separate project from one recently announced by UK producers Alison Owen and Debra Hayward, which will focus on lawyer Sarah Weddington, who represented “Roe” Aka Norma McCorvey, the Texan woman who challenged state law denying her an abortion.
- 1/15/2019
- by Andrew Pulver
- The Guardian - Film News
Texas Rep. Jessica Farrar has taken action against a bill that she says “messes with women’s heads.” The Democrat has proposed her own bill, one that would ban “unregulated masturbatory emissions,” in an effort to highlight state laws that punish women for having abortions. The new Texas bill would ban “unregulated masturbatory emissions,” as part of a bill that the Washington Post calls “a sendup on antiabortion legislation.” It’s Farras’ an attempt to put a spotlight on the state’s practice of making it difficult for women to receive healthcare. Also Read: Norma McCorvey, Jane Roe of Roe v Wade,...
- 3/13/2017
- by Brian Flood
- The Wrap
Story will centre on Sarah Weddington, the lawyer who represented Norma McCorvey in landmark case that paved way for abortion rights across Us
The producers of Suffragette are to make a film telling the story of Roe v Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that gave every woman in the Us the right to have an abortion.
According to Deadline, Alison Owen and Debra Hayward’s Monumental Pictures is set to produce the film, which will be written by the Bafta-winning screenwriter Jennifer Majka.
Continue reading...
The producers of Suffragette are to make a film telling the story of Roe v Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that gave every woman in the Us the right to have an abortion.
According to Deadline, Alison Owen and Debra Hayward’s Monumental Pictures is set to produce the film, which will be written by the Bafta-winning screenwriter Jennifer Majka.
Continue reading...
- 3/9/2017
- by Gwilym Mumford
- The Guardian - Film News
Norma McCorvey -- aka Jane Roe in the landmark Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade that established abortion as a constitutional right -- has died. Norma was just 22 when championed the fight for a woman's right to an abortion ... and she became the center of one of the most contentious legal battles in American history that came to a head in 1973 when the Supreme Court legalized abortion. Norma actually shifted her position on abortion from...
- 2/18/2017
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
Norma McCorvey, better known as Jane Roe of the landmark abortion case Roe v. Wade, has died. She was 69. Journalist Joshua Prager, who is working on a book about the case, confirmed her death in an assisted-living facility in Katy, Texas, where she was suffering from a heart ailment. McCorvey was only 22 in 1970 when she filed a lawsuit to legally and safely end a pregnancy. At the time, abortion was prohibited in most of the country except when the mother’s life was at risk. Also Read: Anti-Abortion Activist Tells Shocked Joy Reid Birth Control Should Be Illegal (Video) At the.
- 2/18/2017
- by Rosemary Rossi
- The Wrap
- You wouldn’t think films such as American History X and Lake of Fire would come from a man so soft-spoken, with a slew of nervous mannerisms. Also hard to believe, was that this was the man who eagerly fought to have his named changed to Humpty Dumpty on the American History X credits, after Ed Norton went in and re-cut the film for more screen time.Kaye self-financed this new documentary on Abortion and has been compiling footage for the past fifteen years. A harrowing, honest look at the situation Kaye interviewed individuals from all sides of the debate including Norm Chomsky, Randall Terry, Alan Dershowitz, Norma McCorvey (aka Jane Roe) and Frances Kissling. Most haunting is the footage of Paul Hill, a seemingly diplomatic, yet extremely vocal, pro-choice zealot who wound up being executed by the state of Florida after gunning down an abortion doctor and his assistant.
- 10/6/2007
- IONCINEMA.com
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