NextWatch
HomeMoviesTV Shows
HomeMoviesTV Shows
Cinema AIWatchlist
NextWatch
  • Home
  • About
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
Data provided by TMDBMade with ❤️ in India
NextWatch
Backdrop Image
Making a Killing: The Untold Story of Psychotropic Drugging

Making a Killing: The Untold Story of Psychotropic Drugging (2008)

Movie •4.0 •1h 35m •All Ages
Documentary

Not available for streaming in your region.

Psychotropic drugs. It’s the story of big money-drugs that fuel a $330 billion psychiatric industry, without a single cure. The cost in human terms is even greater-these drugs now kill an estimated 42,000 people every year. And the death count keeps rising. Containing more than 175 interviews with lawyers, mental health experts, the families of victims and the survivors themselves, this riveting documentary rips the mask off psychotropic drugging and exposes a brutal but well-entrenched money-making machine. Before these drugs were introduced in the market, people who had these conditions would not have been given any drugs at all. So it is the branding of a disease and it is the branding of a drug for a treatment of a disease that did not exist before the industry made the disease.

More like this

Я призналась в любви взрослой женщине. Самый тяжелый разговор в моей жизни
ANGEL
The Blood Is at the Doorstep
The Mind's Big Bang
The Song That Calls You Home
Salam
Das Auge - Forschung sehen

You may also like

Prescription Thugs
Have a Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedelics
Whitney: Can I Be Me
78/52
The House I Live In
The Bleeding Edge
Philip K Dick: A Day in the Afterlife
We're All Going to Die
Leviathan
Shipbuilder
Methadonia
Counterfeit Culture
Entheogen: Awakening the Divine Within
Who's Afraid of Alice Miller?
The Enemies of Reason
Stigma
The Erectionman
Joseph Nicolosi: A True Friend
The Case of Bruno Lüdke
Belushi
Jim & Andy: The Great Beyond
Visions of Light
The Cutting Edge: The Magic of Movie Editing
The Inventor: Out for Blood in Silicon Valley
Fuck
Deep Web
Directed by John Ford
Take Your Pills
Seduced and Abandoned
HyperNormalisation
John Candy: I Like Me
Chadwick Boseman: A Tribute for a King
Spielberg