ThiefHott
Too much of everything
Listonixio
Fresh and Exciting
Fairaher
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Kimball
Exactly the movie you think it is, but not the movie you want it to be.
Kyla1098
I have watched this movie due to the fact I live in WV and know many of the same type of people who are in this documentary. The Documentary follows several people in Oceana, WV. Most who have lost everything including their kids due to drug abuse. I want to say it does explain who the pill epidemic started, its was due to the coal miners in the area getting pain from the hard work the mines bring. The mines a lot of the time have their own doctor who wrote out pain medication, anything to get the miners to keep working. Once they were on Max dose and stopped working, and they had to quit, they found out they were addicted. The younger people who don't work in the mines claim that there is nothing else to do, that a lot of their dad's were coal miners and had a lot of money and that's how they would use. No one saw it as a bad thing because the drugs they were using, doctors gave out. It goes into the hospitals as well as with a dentist. They talk to several people from a young mother who lost her kids, to man who lived under a bridge. It really eye opening how a drug can control you. Some of the people are clean in the film, but most are ongoing users. There is ongoing drug use and needles as well as how people are getting drugs in the city. Its sad but an interesting look into an ongoing problem all over the USA.
mhendroff
This documentary seems terribly unfinished. Nothing about how the drugs flow in, why the law enforcement cannot stem the tide, why the residents of this small community seems especially prone to addiction (i am sorry - but just "there is nothing to do here" is a major cop out!).It appears the documentary makers latched on to a good topic - drug addiction in rural town USA - along with its related social ills - but then just had no direction of where to take it, apart from having a series of interviews. Unfinished - which is a shame, because so much more could have been done.
Clayton Davis
Raw, emotional, and heartbreaking at times, Sean Dunne's Oxyana shows the struggle and loss of drug-addiction in Oceania, West Virginia, a tiny mining town that has its 1,400 citizens succumbing to Oxycontin. With an atmospheric somber that's reminiscent to the eye-opening Kids (1995) by Larry Clark, the film depicts the struggle of addiction and plays nearly fifteen examples of life-shattering changes you would see in the first forty-five minutes of the A&E's hit-show "Intervention." While filmmaking style doesn't always hit the right chords and not offering any real resolutions or suggestions for fixing the problem, if anything, Oxyana shows the youth of the lost generation being picked off one by one as we remain helpless.There may be no real answer at this point in time for the problem to be fully resolved. Perhaps that's Dunne's brilliance in an almost waving the white flag sort of fashion. Some of the stories of these people are horrific and you can almost see sympathize with their reasoning for drug usage through their testimonies. The film is polished enough to open the door for discussion by political and movie-goers everywhere and emotional enough to warrant a reaction.Read More @ The Awards Circuit (http://www.awardscircuit.com)
tonywohlfarth
Oceana, West Virginia is the setting for Sean Dunne's startling portrait of a town beset with prescription drug abuse. Oxyana is the nickname given to the once proud Appalachian coal mining community of 1,400, and the name of this startling documentary which received its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 19. Dunne & his crew spent 21 days of filming in the summer of 2012 in Oceana. Oxycana presents the people through a series of incredibly candid interviews. The director conducted open-ended interviews and is able to gain their trust by asking non-judgemental questions. Addiction to pain-killers like OxyContin & Percoset is the reality facing two generations of residents, and the film depicts pregnant mothers expressing fears about what lies ahead for their children. We see addicts shooting up so "the pain goes away" and youth mourning the loss of their friends and family, taken away by overdosing. This is Dunne's first documentary feature, and demonstrates a remarkable skill in allowing them to tell their stories. Oxyana could be set anywhere in North America, and the brutal reality it depicts is not easy to watch and reveals a tremendous talent in documentary film making.