Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe

2016

Action / Documentary

8
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 38% · 13 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 84% · 1K ratings
IMDb Rating 4.6/10 10 5229 5.2K

Plot summary

A documentary alleging that the CDC, the government agency charged with protecting the health of American citizens, destroyed data on their 2004 study that allegedly showed a link between the MMR vaccine and autism.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
November 26, 2020 at 01:04 PM

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Movie Reviews

Reviewed by smashtheelder 5 / 10

Mediocre cinema, with a frustrating perspective on autism

Just some disclosure: I have mild autism, the part of the spectrum formerly known as Asperger's Syndrome. Personally, I don't think it's useful to consider Asperger's as autism. There is a world of difference between the wordless, gurgling, infantile severely autistic and the kooky weirdo Asperger's people. This kind of inclusive diagnosis throws off statistics, and when people like those in this documentary say that 1 in 250 children are diagnosed with autism, and present this as a horrible thing, I take it as an insult; I know that they are thinking of the severely autistic, who are difficult and a little frightening, but I get the sense that they don't see a difference between that and people like myself.

Anyway, the documentary itself: it is not an all-out anti-vaccine screed. It specifically targets the triple strand MMR vaccine. More to the point, it argues that the particular vaccine as currently produced has major problems that those higher up refuse to do anything about. The film sums up its agenda at the end, and since it asks the viewer to have their children receive the single strand vaccines instead, it is clearly not saying to never vaccinate your children. The problem, of course, is that this nuanced view is not what most people, particularly its primary audience of those who already refuse to vaccinate, will take from it. The film doesn't help its case here, since the parents it presents hold this general anti-vaccine view, and it shows a couple of PSAs that warn against vaccines overall, rather than targeting the suspect MMR.

Andrew Wakefield is the director, and he also presents himself as one of the main interview subjects. He does an excellent job of selling himself: not knowing beforehand, I thought he was the most sensible subject in the film and thought the director would have done well to focus more on him. Well, he's clearly a scientist/activist, not a cinema man. If he is sincere in his intentions, he could have done a lot to improve his film.

For instance, he spends at least a third of the film on "heartbreaking" stories from parents of autistic children. This is mainly communicated through the parents telling the camera about how difficult it was. I don't have enough space to discuss the film's perspective on autism at length, but suffice to say that I don't feel it made a convincing case that it is something to worry about. The black boy who accidentally got a double dose of the MMR vaccine was a prime candidate to demonstrate how horrible autism is. His facial expression looks mentally disabled and spends all of his screen time watching Blues Clues on a laptop. However, the film gives greater prominence to a white boy who is only mildly autistic. This boy was undoubtedly difficult to raise, but, judging by what we are shown of him, he could easily get a decent job and live a good life if someone taught him social skills. I found it offensive that the film equated this level of autism with honestly severe cases and it undermined the film's presentation. And here's a thought: why doesn't the film show the effects of measles, mumps or rubella? If autism is so much worse, it couldn't hurt to show it, and it gives parents a better chance of making an informed decision about what is best for their children.

Vaxxed rubbed me the wrong way when addressing autism head-on, but that is not the whole film. At heart, this is a conspiracy story in the mould of Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11. Whether or not you agree with its conclusions, Moore's film was entertaining and excellent cinema. The same cannot be said of Vaxxed. That's inevitable, since the implications of its conspiracy aren't as drastic (what's scarier, your child getting autism or being sent overseas to die for a meaningless, profit-driven war?) but there is still much room for improvement in the presentation. The driving narrative device of the film is the surreptitiously recorded confessions of Dr. William Thompson, but the film is neither dynamic enough to turn his whistleblowing into a compelling conspiracy narrative, nor is it neutral enough to be intellectually convincing. It's possible Wakefield watered down his original vision to make the film commercial: perhaps he added the emotional arguments because he heard that's what convinces people, and just isn't talented enough a director to simplify scientific issues without becoming dumbed down.

As is probably evident, I don't have strong opinions on the vaccine debate, though I feel that they could come up with a better argument against than autism. It's not really necessary to see the film if you can get an objective summary of its contentions. Namely, the MMR vaccine may cause autism, this being less likely if given later; there aren't strict enough regulations for vaccines relative to other pharmaceutical products; and there is corruption in the CDC, an example being their attempted cover-up of the alleged link between the MMR vaccine and autism. I have tried to judge this film as a self-contained work, since I lack the knowledge and interest required to address the factuality of its content.

In short, I disagree with its presentation of the problematic nature of autism and, as cinema, it is about average. Hardly worthy of the controversy it stirred up. 5 out of 10.

Reviewed by rlstringer-81985 4 / 10

This is Designed to Trick You (Review)

This Is a pseudoscience documentary film alleging a cover-up by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of a purported link between the MMR vaccine and autism.

According to Variety, the film "purports to investigate the claims of a senior scientist at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who revealed that the CDC had allegedly manipulated and destroyed data on an important study about autism and the MMR vaccine"; this is a anti-vaccine propaganda film

The film was directed by discredited anti-vaccine activist Andrew Wakefield, who was struck off the medical register in the United Kingdom in 2010 due to ethical violations related to his fraudulent research into the role of vaccines in autism.

It was scheduled to premiere at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival but was withdrawn by the festival. In reviewing the film, Indiewire said that "Wakefield doesn't just have a dog in this fight; he is the dog"

According to Variety, the film "purports to investigate the claims of a senior scientist at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who revealed that the CDC had allegedly manipulated and destroyed data on an important study about autism and the MMR vaccine."

The film features the so-called "CDC whistleblower" narrative that is based on anti-vaccination activist and associate professor Brian Hooker's paper describing claims by senior CDC scientist William Thompson that he and his co-authors had omitted mention of a correlation they found between vaccination and autism in African-American boys in a CDC study.

However a 2011 IOM report showed that evidence favors rejection of a relationship between the MMR vaccine and autism.

The film contains edited excerpts of several phone calls between Hooker and Thompson recorded without Thompson's knowledge.

Hooker's 2014 paper on the narrative was subsequently retracted due to "serious concerns about the validity of its conclusions" and in 2015 the CDC had confirmed that any such initial correlation had ceased to exist once they performed a more in-depth analysis of the children in the study.

These sometimes spliced-together unauthorized phone recordings of Thompson, according to the Houston Press, form the "crux of the entire movie ... And ... that's it". On the "CDC whistleblower" narrative, Philip LaRussa, a professor of paediatric medicine at Columbia University Medical Center, said the film-makers "were saying, there's this silver bullet here, and the CDC is hiding it, and no one else has looked at this issue, which is not the case". Thompson does not appear in the film and did not see it before it was released.

Thompson had released a statement on the controversy in 2014 which the New York Times discussed in its coverage of Vaxxed; the Times described it as "saying that while he questioned the 2004 study's presentation of some data, he would never advise people not to get vaccinated."

Reviewed by laurenscullionxx 10 / 10

Definitely trying to clear any good reviews of this...

This was a good watch... I would have gave it 8/10 but seems as the government etc removing this of the face of the earth(it's so hard to find online now) and making all the reviews bad it gets a 10 from me. These reviews are either 1 fake or 2 from people stupid enough to vaccinate.

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