Pay or Die
Bluntly if appropriately titled, 'Pay or Die' serves as an infuriating reminder of the economic and social injustice permeating our system.
Pay or Die
The U.S. healthcare system is the most expensive in the world; almost half of all Americans reportedly struggle to pay for health care. Pay or Die explores the crushing financial reality for millions of insulin dependent Americans living with diabetes, as pharmaceutical companies push the price of this lifesaving medication to exorbitant levels, making record breaking profits. This is only further bolstered by the government’s lack of regulation.
Pay or Die voices the stories of families struggling to afford their lifesaving medications in one of the richest countries in the world: the United States. The film trails a distraught Minnesota family desperate for answers after their son Alec dies at the age of 26 from rationing his insulin only weeks after aging off his parents health insurance. In Oregon, a mother and daughter who both live with type one diabetes become homeless due to the exorbitant cost of their medication and are forced to join the plight of medical refugees who are leaving the US to source affordable medication in other countries. A newly diagnosed woman must rethink her future to factor in her new economic reality. This enraging and enlightening film lays bare the human cost of the United States’ insulin affordability crisis, and serves as a call to action against the medical-industrial complex that monetizes our bodies and lives.
“Most of my adult life has been defined by one inescapable question: How can I make enough money to afford the insulin I need to stay alive?” — Scott Ruderman, director, Pay or Die
“We made a pact that no other family will go through the pain that we’re going through. We’re trying to make a change, a difference in the system. I don’t want to hear anyone else suffer. I hear too many names along with [my son] Alec. Enough is enough.” — James Holt Jr., film participant, Pay or Die
Previously screened as part of the Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2023.
Nominated, SXSW Grand Jury Award – Documentary Feature, SXSW Film Festival 2023
Pay or Die voices the stories of families struggling to afford their lifesaving medications in one of the richest countries in the world: the United States. The film trails a distraught Minnesota family desperate for answers after their son Alec dies at the age of 26 from rationing his insulin only weeks after aging off his parents health insurance. In Oregon, a mother and daughter who both live with type one diabetes become homeless due to the exorbitant cost of their medication and are forced to join the plight of medical refugees who are leaving the US to source affordable medication in other countries. A newly diagnosed woman must rethink her future to factor in her new economic reality. This enraging and enlightening film lays bare the human cost of the United States’ insulin affordability crisis, and serves as a call to action against the medical-industrial complex that monetizes our bodies and lives.
“Most of my adult life has been defined by one inescapable question: How can I make enough money to afford the insulin I need to stay alive?” — Scott Ruderman, director, Pay or Die
“We made a pact that no other family will go through the pain that we’re going through. We’re trying to make a change, a difference in the system. I don’t want to hear anyone else suffer. I hear too many names along with [my son] Alec. Enough is enough.” — James Holt Jr., film participant, Pay or Die
Previously screened as part of the Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2023.
Nominated, SXSW Grand Jury Award – Documentary Feature, SXSW Film Festival 2023
Genre
Documentary,
Health
Runtime
90
Language
English
Director
Rachael Dyer,
Scott Alexander Ruderman
Awards:
Nominee, Grand Jury Award ~ Documentary Feature, South by Southwest
Played at
Monica Film Center 11.10.23 - 11.16.23
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