Bullfrog Films
88 minutes
Closed Captioned

Study Guide
Grades 10 - 12, College, Adults

Directed by Martha Shane, Lane Wilson

DVD Purchase $280, Rent $90

US Release Date: 2014
Copyright Date: 2013
DVD ISBN: 1-93777-299-3

Subjects
American Studies
Anthropology
Civil Rights
Ethics
Health
Human Rights
Humanities
Law
Medical Ethics
Philosophy
Political Science
Psychology
Religion
Reproductive Rights
Sociology
Women's Studies

Awards and Festivals
Sundance Film Festival
Human Rights Award, Full Frame Documentary Film Festival
Documentary Jury Prize, Sarasota Film Festival
HotDocs, Canadian Documentary Film Festival
AFI Docs
San Francisco International Film Festival
BAMcinemaFest
True/False Film Festival
Sheffield DocFest
Seattle International Film Festival
After Tiller - Special Offer

Sheds a humanistic light on the heated abortion debate by going inside the lives of the last four doctors in America who openly provide third-trimester abortions.

"A rare feat...a calm, humanist documentary about a hot-button topic" Alissa Simon, Variety

Since the assassination of Dr. George Tiller in Kansas in May 2009, there are only four American doctors left who openly provide third-trimester abortions. AFTER TILLER paints a complex, compassionate portrait of these physicians--Dr. LeRoy Carhart, Dr. Warren Hern, Dr. Susan Robinson and Dr. Shelley Sella--who have become the new number-one targets of the anti-abortion movement, yet continue to risk their lives every day to do work that many believe is murder, but which they believe is profoundly important for their patients' lives.

The film weaves together revealing, in-depth interviews with the doctors with intimate vérité scenes from their lives and inside their clinics, where they counsel and care for their anxious, vulnerable patients at an important crossroads in their lives. By sharing the moving stories of several of these patients, AFTER TILLER illuminates the experiences of women who seek late abortions and the reasons why they do so.

Web Page: http://www.bullfrogfilms.com/catalog/atilso.html

Reviews
"Whether one is pro-life, pro-choice or without an opinion on the issue, After Tiller provides personal insight into a heart-wrenching, complex reality. The film does not pretend to be an answer to the abortion controversy but rather a presentation of the people who are demonized, correctly or incorrectly, for their actions."

The Hollywood Reporter

"Debuting helmers Martha Shane and Lana Wilson manage a rare feat in After Tiller, making a calm, humanist documentary about a hot-button topic...Well contextualized and sensitively shot with extraordinary access, the pic reflects the personal, moral and ethical struggles of the doctors as well as their patients, and deserves the widest possible audience."
Variety

"Intimate and heartfelt...Brings an emotional clarity to an issue in which every nuanced turn of phrase has been made politically complicated."
The Los Angeles Times

"Extraordinarily compassionate and thought-provoking...An important film that looks unblinkingly at an important subject."
FlavorWire

"One of the most courageous pieces of filmmaking I've ever seen. The film takes the issue out of pulpit/talk show screaming-match format and engages viewers' hearts and minds, reminding us why we need to make and watch documentary films at all."
Fandor

"One of the most emotionally wrenching and powerful non-fiction pieces this year."
Hollywood Chicago

"An intelligent, nuanced, and sensitive portrait of the last four remaining doctors in the U.S. who perform third-trimester abortions."
Indiewire

"A+! A terrific documentary that handles sensitively this controversial and heated topic."
Movie City News

"[Voices] complex sentiments too rarely heard on either side of such a polarizing issue."
The Onion

"Presents its extremely divisive and controversial subject matter with remarkable sensitivity...Admirably explores the fine nuances and specifics of these physicians' lives and the difficult decisions that they and their patients make. It may not make for the most sensationalistic account of the issue, but it's probably one of the most humanistic."
Screen International