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The Business of Being Born (2008) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
7.1/10   353 votes
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Director:
Abby Epstein
Contact:
View company contact information for The Business of Being Born on IMDbPro.
Genre:
Documentary more
Plot:
Birth: it's a miracle. A rite of passage. A natural part of life. But more than anything, birth is a business... more | full synopsis
User Comments:
Informative? Yes. Entertaining? (Yawn!) more (6 total)

Cast

  (Credited cast)
Julia Barnett Tracy ... Herself
Louann Brizendine ... Herself
Michael Brodman ... Himself
Patricia Burkhardt ... Herself
Tina Cassidy ... Herself
Robbie Davis-Floyd ... Herself - Medical Anthropologist
Eugene Declerq ... Himself
Abby Epstein ... Herself
Ina May Gaskin ... Herself - Midwife
Nadine Goodman ... Herself - Public Health Specialist
Carolyn Havens Neimann ... Herself - Midwife
Susan Hodges ... Herself - President, Citizens for Midwifery
Gregor Huebner ... Himself
La Juana Huebner ... Herself
Ricki Lake ... Herself
Elan V. McAllister ... Herself (as Elan Vital McAllister)
Jacques Moritz ... Himself
Cara Muhlhahn ... Herself
Dr. Michel Odent ... Himself
David Radzinski ... Himself
Mayra Radzinski ... Herself
Catherine Tanksley ... Herself - Midwife
Van Tracy ... Himself
Dr. Marsden Wagner ... Himself
more

Additional Details

Runtime:
USA:87 min
Country:
USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color

Fun Stuff

Movie Connections:
Features "A Baby Story" (1998) more
Soundtrack:
Feel Like Making Love more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
1 out of 7 people found the following comment useful.
Informative? Yes. Entertaining? (Yawn!), 31 January 2009
4/10
Author: fwomp from United States

Informative? Sure. Gives a new perspective on a broken system? Definitely. Entertaining? Er ...not really.

After talk-show host Ricki Lake experienced a bad childbirth in-hospital, she decided to try a midwife, and thus THE BUSINESS OF BEING BORN was ...um ...birthed. I can't help but think that some of this (not all) was a ploy by Lake to put herself back in the public eye; specifically, the movie industry. Although this is strictly a documentary, and other actors support various causes (from freeing Darfur to Tibetan independence), this one felt a bit more forced.

The reason I say this is that the entire documentary was exceptionally boring and exceptionally lopsided. I work in the medical field (as an RN) but not in an Obstetrics setting. I can, however, vouch for the terrible cost of healthcare and some of the impersonalness of those giving it (as this documentary pointed out). I've heard doctors talking about "tee times" on the golf course and the need to "get home by dinner," so time is a big factor for physicians (the film pointed out that C-section deliveries peek at 4pm — just prior to dinnertime — and again at 10pm — so doctors can get home to bed). Be damned whether the patient needs a C-section or not, doctors force the decision so that they can "get on with their lives." Cut and run! Even with its interesting take on the care of OB/Gyn patients in the U.S., the film never delves outside of the States even though certain statistics are presented (including telling us that the infant mortality rate in the U.S. is one of the highest amongst developed countries). I would've liked to have seen at least one interview with a Japanese midwife or a European midwife, and have them show us how their system works. But we're never give the opportunity to see this for ourselves.

The boring nature of the film is that it never really finds its focus. Although the title of it is The Business of Being Born, it focused more on the plight of midwives and their care of expectant mothers at home or in midwife clinics. We drive around with midwives, trot down the road with midwives, listen to midwives talk on the phone to patients, and get to watch a couple of in-home births. Then we start the entire process over again.

And there's also a brief and confusing stint in which we learn one of the film's producers is pregnant and trying to decide on prenatal care.

All-in-all it's an informative story, but one that might cause a few too many yawns.

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Message Boards

Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for The Business of Being Born (2008)
Recent Posts (updated daily)User
Mans perspective mosl31
Utter baloney drlloyd11
This documentary is for people who... sweetpea18209
Does home birth = no pain relief at all? feliciaswt
What this movie is really about dinnes-1
Lack of Counterargument MrEye_17
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