Acclaimed director Charlie Minn brings attention to the victims of the infamous massacre that occurred on February 14th, 2018 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.Acclaimed director Charlie Minn brings attention to the victims of the infamous massacre that occurred on February 14th, 2018 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.Acclaimed director Charlie Minn brings attention to the victims of the infamous massacre that occurred on February 14th, 2018 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
Sophia D'Elia
- Self - Student
- (as Sophia Delia)
X González
- Self - Activist
- (as Emma Gonzalez)
Samantha Grady
- Self - Student
- (as Sam Grady)
Fred Guttenberg
- Self - Father of Jaime
- (archive footage)
Jeff Heinrich
- Self - Coral Springs P. D.
- (as Sgt. Jeff Heinrich)
Marilyn Rule Heinrich
- Self - Ex-MSD basketball coach
- (as Marilyn Rule Heinrch)
Featured reviews
Insensitive, totally rude questions, I deeply feel for the victims but the interviewer/director is not the right person who should have done this movie at all.
Asking questions to victims with survivor's guilt like "how do you live with that every day?" is downright stupid and outrageously insensitive. The guy has an emotional IQ of about zero.
Asking questions to victims with survivor's guilt like "how do you live with that every day?" is downright stupid and outrageously insensitive. The guy has an emotional IQ of about zero.
A very real, raw, emotional exploration of the entirely avoidable tragedy that unfolded on Valentines Day 2018.
Unfortunately the director is at various points grossly insensitive and intrusive in his questioning of survivors in a way that is very uncomfortable to watch.
Unfortunately the director is at various points grossly insensitive and intrusive in his questioning of survivors in a way that is very uncomfortable to watch.
The director used cheap, dramatic questions to provoke sensationalistic answers from victims and witnesses. There's always someone who will exploit tragedy for personal gain. The film does offer interesting perspectives from witnesses, but the directors sensationalistic tactics are deplorable and desperate.
It is a shame that this keeps happening, but the silence at the end of the documentary seems to be a little ridiculous
I don't know if I would go as far to call it truly exploitative or disrespectful, but it rides the line at a couple of points (Minn's interviewing style is sometimes a little aggressive though, considering some of the interviewees, for sure).
The other potential issue is the length and the repetition. It's technically not very competent, in terms of how it looks and is cut together, and does get by because of the content and some of the emotional stories recounted... and the fact that I think at its core, it's intentions are ultimately good.
The other potential issue is the length and the repetition. It's technically not very competent, in terms of how it looks and is cut together, and does get by because of the content and some of the emotional stories recounted... and the fact that I think at its core, it's intentions are ultimately good.
Did you know
- Quotes
Self - Scott Beigel's father: When people comment and say to me, oh, he's such a hero that day. He was, no question about it. But he was a hero on the 13th and the 12th and the 11th because his whole being was to have an impact on kids.
- How long is Parkland: Inside Building 12?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 59m(119 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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