Ce drame expose les causes et conséquences de la crise des opioïdes aux États-Unis en suivant ses auteurs, ses victimes et une avocate qui veut faire éclater la vérité.Ce drame expose les causes et conséquences de la crise des opioïdes aux États-Unis en suivant ses auteurs, ses victimes et une avocate qui veut faire éclater la vérité.Ce drame expose les causes et conséquences de la crise des opioïdes aux États-Unis en suivant ses auteurs, ses victimes et une avocate qui veut faire éclater la vérité.
- Prix
- 2 victoires et 3 nominations au total
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No. This is not Dopesick. It's different and it's ugly. Really ugly and dirty. Just like the reality of the topic is.
I watched Dopesick and appreciated it for what it was (and it was brilliantly done). While the stories are similar, and you know the outcome, the way they get is different. And this limited series is also very well done - and gives a lot more information through Edie Flowers - played by Uzo Aduba. Wow. She is what keeps it all together.
This series has a hell of an ensemble. However, the people who introduce each segment will break your heart and hopefully open your mind.
You also have to get over how much Tyler Ritter looks like his dad.
Do watch it. Leave Dopesick behind. Neither are easy, but they are most certainly enlightening. And sad - on so many levels.
I watched Dopesick and appreciated it for what it was (and it was brilliantly done). While the stories are similar, and you know the outcome, the way they get is different. And this limited series is also very well done - and gives a lot more information through Edie Flowers - played by Uzo Aduba. Wow. She is what keeps it all together.
This series has a hell of an ensemble. However, the people who introduce each segment will break your heart and hopefully open your mind.
You also have to get over how much Tyler Ritter looks like his dad.
Do watch it. Leave Dopesick behind. Neither are easy, but they are most certainly enlightening. And sad - on so many levels.
I'm surprised by the low ratings and glad I didn't read before watching because I enjoyed the show.
It showed various perspectives from the Sackler family and employees, the pharma reps, the doctors, the whistleblowers, the patients and then the addicts.
I thought it was filmed well, there were comedic moments not to poke fun at the subject matter which is very sad but more at the impotence of the law makers and greed of the Sackler family and it's employees and those who jumped ship.
I thought the ending was a bit rushed I'd have liked more epilogue but overall we binged over 2 days as it was very watchable.
It showed various perspectives from the Sackler family and employees, the pharma reps, the doctors, the whistleblowers, the patients and then the addicts.
I thought it was filmed well, there were comedic moments not to poke fun at the subject matter which is very sad but more at the impotence of the law makers and greed of the Sackler family and it's employees and those who jumped ship.
I thought the ending was a bit rushed I'd have liked more epilogue but overall we binged over 2 days as it was very watchable.
Painkiller is a rather fantistical retelling of a sad story that is all too familiar to many of us. It doesn't compare very favorably with Dopesick, counting on flashy visuals that almost overwhelm a compelling narrative. The acting is excellent, as are the technical aspects, and the show is, in it's way, entertaining. It's always a pleasure to watch Matthew Broderick. The most moving aspect of the series may be the heartfelt disclaimers that introduce each episode. As the deplorable Sacklers have now been shielded from further lawsuits, they will now be able to slink off the stage to enjoy their off-shore millions. None have served jail time, none have been prosecuted. Perhaps the only bit of satisfaction is to see the Sackler name obliterated from the many art museum wings and hospitals that they funded with their ill gotten fortune. Disgrace is their only legacy.
Honestly we had Dopesick showing the same story about the opioid crisis in USA. And everyone thought that was fire !
This garbage show is nothing more than a Netflix revisited story about opioids. And won't win any Emmy.
This show is saved by Matthew Brodrick of course, that's enjoyable to see him back on the screen. But man the rest of the cast can't help the poor attempt of this show.
I don't know if Netflix had the idea before or after Hulu to make this happen, but man they missed it with this one (again).
Some plots are explained/shown as if the viewer had an IQ of an oyster.
Better pass than waste your time people !
This garbage show is nothing more than a Netflix revisited story about opioids. And won't win any Emmy.
This show is saved by Matthew Brodrick of course, that's enjoyable to see him back on the screen. But man the rest of the cast can't help the poor attempt of this show.
I don't know if Netflix had the idea before or after Hulu to make this happen, but man they missed it with this one (again).
Some plots are explained/shown as if the viewer had an IQ of an oyster.
Better pass than waste your time people !
This story has already been dramatised by hulu in dopesick so redoing the exact same thing, when the first time it was done so immaculately, is bound to not go that well...this is a much more superficial version in the sense that it is created with a more entertaining aspect than adherence to the actual truth and it is also squeezed in only 6 episodes when there is so much more to cover. It is an ok show, with few good performances, like Richard Sackler's role, but only because the story behind it is so fascinating, otherwise there is nothing great to hold the viewer. It is like when Jennifer Lawrence was booked to play Elizabeth Holmes in the film Bad Blood but after seeing The Dropout and Amanda Seyfried's performance, she said "what's the point in redoing something that has been done so well?" and quit...So if you want the best version of this story, check out Dopesick.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis series is based on Barry Meier's book Pain Killer: An Empire of Deceit and the Origin of America's Opioid Epidemic and the New Yorker article "The Family That Built the Empire of Pain," by Patrick Radden Keefe.
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Détails
- Durée48 minutes
- Couleur
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- 16:9 HD
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