Bullfrog Films
81 minutes
SDH Captioned
Grades 10 - 12, College, Adults

Directed by Ryan McGarry
Produced by Linda Goldstein Knowlton

DVD Purchase $350, Rent $95

US Release Date: 2015
Copyright Date: 2013
DVD ISBN: 1-94154-526-2

Subjects
American Studies
Anthropology
Business Practices
Emergency Medicine
Health
Healthcare Management
Management
Medicine
Nursing
Poverty
Social Justice
Social Work
Sociology

Awards and Festivals
New York Times Critics' Pick
Audience Award, Starz Denver Film Festival
Best Documentary, Los Angeles Film Festival
Audience Favorite Documentary, Aspen Film Festival
Best Documentary Feature, Hamptons International Film Festival
Vancouver International Film Festival
Cleveland International Film Festival
Santa Barbara International Film Festival
Heartland Film Festival
Sedona Film Festival
Portland International Film Festival
Rehoboth Beach Film Festival
Code Black

Unprecedented access to the ER at Los Angeles County Hospital provides a doctor's-eye view into the heart of our complex and overburdened healthcare system.

"A must-see for anyone concerned about the state of health care in this country." Steven Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer

In his vivid and thought-provoking filmmaking debut, physician Ryan McGarry gives us unprecedented access to America's busiest Emergency Department. Amidst real life-and-death situations, McGarry follows a dedicated team of charismatic, young doctors-in-training as they wrestle openly with both their ideals and with the realities of saving lives in a complex and overburdened system. Their training ground and source of inspiration is "C-Booth," Los Angeles County Hospital's legendary trauma bay, the birthplace of Emergency Medicine, where "more people have died and more people have been saved than in any other square footage in the United States."

CODE BLACK offers a tense, doctor's-eye view, right into the heart of the healthcare debate - bringing us face to face with America's only 24/7 safety net.

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

Reviews
"Code Black chronicles the challenges of providing care in one of the nation's busiest emergency departments. It deftly captures the adrenaline of resuscitating critically ill patients and explores the role of the emergency department as the healthcare safety net."

Dr. Benjamin Sun, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University

"Electrifying is one way of describing Code Black, a remarkably candid and kinetic documentary about emergency medicine that could probably only have been made by an ER doctor."
John Anderson, Wall Street Journal

"A remarkably intimate portrait of a small group of young doctors swimming upstream against a nearly overwhelming tide of challenges. Viewers are treated to unfiltered glimpses of the expertise, emotion and chaos of emergency medicine and must discover an overarching message in the film themselves from its extensive and at times unrelenting glimpses of largely uncompensated patient care. One message is clear, however. Healthcare is broken. This film will be excellent for teaching purposes: for use in curricula in management, health care management, medicine, social work, and more."
Amy C. Edmondson, Professor of Leadership and Management, Harvard Business School, Author, Teaming: How Organizations Learn, Innovate, and Compete in the Knowledge Economy

"Dramatic...Code Black is an effective and well-done presentation of the trials and tribulations of an ER and all who serve within its walls."
George Allen Wistreich, Science Books and Films

"Insightful...Obamacare or not, something has to be done about America's inefficient and unjust healthcare system, and young idealistic doctors are the best-placed and best-informed to suggest what those changes might be...Suitable for high school classes and college courses in cultural anthropology, medical anthropology, and American studies, as well as for general audiences."
Jack David Eller, Anthropology Review Database

"Code Black is highly recommended for every academic library that supports health sciences programs, particularly medical and nursing schools. It should probably be required viewing for anyone thinking about going into emergency medicine."
Lori Widzinski, SUNY at Buffalo, Educational Media Reviews Online

"What comes across loud and clear is the incredible idealism of doctors who are struggling to be effective in a healthcare system hobbled by political and economic constraints...insightful and genuinely moving...Highly recommended."
F. Swietek, Video Librarian

"Harrowing and unforgettable...Highly recommended."
Midwest Book Review

"What makes the film so powerful is its insider's perspective. Viewers are privy to scenes they could not possibly witness elsewhere...A highly ambitious and spellbinding film...Vitally important, urgent and sometimes heartbreaking, Code Black is consistently absorbing."
Claudia Puig, USA Today

"Code Black provides a compelling insider's view of what it is like to be a doctor in training in our struggling safety-net health care system. The documentary follows the transition of one of the nation's first emergency departments to a state-of-the art facility that comes with stifling paperwork requirements. The efforts of compassionate young doctors who outsmart the system should be inspiration for us to look critically at how health care is delivered in the United States, and to explore creative solutions."
Dr. Karoline Mortensen, Assistant Professor of Health Services Administration, University of Maryland

"Code Black provides a unique window into the struggles of some of our country's biggest unsung heroes. These passionate young doctors are trying to make an increasingly challenging health care system more humane for the patients they serve. As an emergency physician myself, living with many of the similar challenges day to day, I was inspired by the ideals of the next generation of physicians."
Azita G. Hamedani MD, MPH, MBA , Chair, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Wisconsin

"A vigorous companion piece to Peter Nicks's revealing 2012 documentary, The Waiting Room, Code Black (the title describes the emergency room's saturation point) is a keening cri de coeur. Warriors for the neediest among us - the unauthorized, uninsured and just plain unlucky - Dr. McGarry and his cohort save plenty of lives. What they're most in danger of losing is hope."
Jeannette Catsoulis, New York Times

"Provides a fascinating and dramatic look into the ER. It also sheds light on health care reform as seen by those in the trenches."
Film Pulse

"Excellent...Shows what is really at stake as we debate how to make our system better, stronger and more equitable. Code Black shows the hospital emergency department as the great equalizer, where the minimum wage worker meets the corporate executive facing the life and death circumstances of a traumatic accident or illness, and the health professionals who work to keep them alive. In spite of its complexity, we are all part of a single health care system tied together by the dedication of those who spend their time and intellect to keep us alive and ready for another day."
Dr. Michael R. Cousineau, Professor of Family Medicine and Preventive Medicine, Director of the Center for Community Health Studies, University of Southern California

"Riveting! McGarry has created something that feels personal, vital and revelatory."
Los Angeles Times

"Code Black is a provocative, realistic depiction of a group of dedicated physicians providing care on the front lines of one of the busiest emergency rooms in the country...This film is a unique education in the art of healing broken lives, with valuable lessons in compassion, perseverance, and true grit within the increasingly complex world of healthcare delivery."
Dr. Paul A. Ruggieri, MD, Author, The Cost of Cutting: A Surgeon Reveals the Truth Behind a Multibillion-Dollar Industry

"A must-see for anyone concerned about the state of health care in this country. Which should be all of us...Code Black is sobering stuff. The American health system, McGarry's film argues, is broken. But the film is undeniably inspiring, too: Despite everything that is wrong, there are nurses and doctors and technicians determined to do things right."
Steven Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer