Bullfrog Films
54 minutes
Closed Captioned

Grades 10-12, College, Adult

Directed by Judy Jackson
Produced by Judy Jackson for CBC's The Nature of Things

DVD Purchase $79, Rent $45

US Release Date: 2004
Copyright Date: 2004
DVD ISBN: 1-59458-068-5
VHS ISBN: 1-59458-067-7

Subjects
African Studies
Anthropology
Developing World
Ethics
Geography
Global Issues
HIV/AIDS
Health
Humanities
United Nations

Awards and Festivals
UN Department of Public Information Silver Award, The New York Festivals
The Chris Statuette, Columbus International Film & Video Festival
Freddie Award, International Health & Medical Media Awards
CBC Wilderness Award (Best CBC-Produced Documentary of the Year)
Best of Festival Award, Western Psychological Association Film Festival
Vermont International Film Festival
American Psychological Association Convention
World Community Film Festival
"Stories from the Field" United Nations Documentary Film Festival
American Public Health Association Film Festival
The Value of Life
AIDS in Africa Revisited

United Nations' HIV/AIDS envoy, Stephen Lewis, makes an impassioned plea for world public opinion to focus on the AIDS crisis in Africa.

"An outstanding and valuable educational resource for use both in and outside the classroom." Calvin O. Masilela, Ph.D., Dept. of Geography, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

30 million Africans have HIV/AIDS. In the summer of 2003, two years after the release of his award-winning AIDS documentary RACE AGAINST TIME, United Nations' HIV/AIDS envoy Stephen Lewis returns to Africa and documents his incredible personal journey that has led from hope to despair to hope again.

After September 11, when the world's attention turned to homeland security and fighting terrorism, the promises of financial aid to Africa lay broken. Africa, with more than 6,000 people dying every day and 11 million orphans under the age of 15, was a continent enveloped by death. Lewis was convinced that all that was needed was determination and financial resources. The most urgent need was for life-prolonging anti-retroviral drugs for the dying. In Africa these drugs are available to only 75,000 of the four million people who need them.

In 2003 the momentum is finally reignited. Endless disputes concerning generics and the patents held by big pharmaceutical companies have been settled. The World Health Organization has pledged to have three million people on anti-AIDS drugs by 2005. That amounts to a staggering six million pills every day. It is the sheer volume of drugs needed that has led Lewis, along with a handful of Canadian aid agencies, to challenge the Canadian government to pass legislation allowing patents to be circumvented in favor of inexpensive, generic AIDS drugs. If the bill were to pass, it would make history.

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

Reviews
"Stephen Lewis demands that we look at the human devastation caused by AIDS in Africa. He puts the blame for the world's failure directly on the wealthy western nations, where it properly belongs!"

Salih Booker, Executive Director, Africa Action

"[The Value of Life] is a powerful introduction to the African AIDS pandemic seen through the eyes of the United Nation's Special HIV/AIDS envoy Stephen Lewis. Years of neglect - of medical apartheid - have muted the voices of people living with and communities affected by HIV/AIDS, but Lewis' voice resonates with a sense of urgency - altering between rage at the slow pace of scale-up and hope as barriers to treatment are gradually reduced. One of the strengths of the film is Lewis' effort to reconnect with PWAs he has met before and his empathy with children. But viewers should look beyond the foreground of Lewis and his personal crusade to the stark images of ruined, yet heroically struggling communities. If viewers connect with these images of our brother and sisters, our sons and daughters, then they should join Lewis and demonstrate their solidarity by speaking truth to power and by demanding global access to the treatment, prevention, and care methodologies wrongfully withheld from those most in need."
Professor Brook K. Baker, Health Global Access Project, Northeastern University School of Law, Boston, MA, USA

"[The Value of Life] is an outstanding and valuable educational resource for use both in and outside the classroom."
Calvin O. Masilela, Ph.D., Dept. of Geography and Regional Planning, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

"An important addition to any course dealing with global health and development issues. I would definitely use it regularly for my Geography of Africa course, as well as almost any Environmental Studies course."
Peter Walker, Associate Professor, Dept. of Geography, University of Oregon

"*** The Value of Life benefits from Lewis' personal perspective, and serves as another wakeup call to this global catastrophe. Recommended."
Video Librarian

"Particularly noteworthy are the statistics provided for each country visited... The footage captures the stark reality of the pandemic yet manages to portray the spirit of the African people as well. This quality production is recommended for public and academic libraries."
Library Journal

"[The Value of Life] would be a good addition to any collection that deals with the AIDS crisis in Africa. Recommended."
Janis Tyhurst, Reference Librarian, George Fox University, Educational Media Reviews Online