Reality Check Film Series

Showings

King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Sep 19, 2022 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Oct 10, 2022 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Nov 14, 2022 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Dec 12, 2022 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Jan 9, 2023 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Feb 6, 2023 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Feb 13, 2023 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Feb 20, 2023 6:00 PM
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Feb 27, 2023 6:00 PM
My Emotional Life Part 3
Reality Check & The Park Theatre present a free series on addiction, recovery, and mental health to help raise awareness around issues impacting our communities.
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Mar 20, 2023 6:00 PM
Hidden in Plain Sight Part 1
Reality Check & The Park Theatre present a free series on addiction, recovery, and mental health to help raise awareness around issues impacting our communities.
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Mon, Mar 27, 2023 6:00 PM
Hidden in Plain Sight Part 2
Reality Check & The Park Theatre present a free series on addiction, recovery, and mental health to help raise awareness around issues impacting our communities.
King Auditorium at The Park Theatre Sun, Apr 30, 2023 4:00 PM
Bedlam

Description

Reality Check & The Park Theatre present a free series on addiction, recovery, and mental health to help raise awareness around issues impacting our communities.

 

April 30, 2023: Bedlam

Through intimate stories of patients, families, and medical providers, BEDLAM is a feature-length documentary that immerses us in the national crisis surrounding care for people with severe mental illness. Filmed over five years, it brings us inside one of America’s busiest psychiatric emergency rooms, into jails where psychiatric patients are warehoused, and to the homes – and homeless encampments – of members of our communities with mental illness, where silence and shame often compound personal suffering. The story is told in part by director Kenneth Paul Rosenberg, MD, whose own life journey has been profoundly impacted by a family member with severe mental illness.