
Synopsis
for "Period: The End of Menstruation?"
Giovanna Chesler, Producer/Director
16mm
2006
54:00 Running Time
"It explores the idea of suppressing the menstrual period but leaves the viewer to make up her own mind." New York Times
"The debate here is rich and varied. ... An interesting documentary on that time of the month that is definitely recommended." - Video Librarian
"Chesler offers a dialogue here that is relentlessly intelligent, ecumenical, and profoundly sensitive to the varying perspectives of women and girls who must ultimately make their own menstrual choices." - Bust Magazine
"There is often a cloud of shame and guilt shading menstruation that prevents open dialogue. Chesler has lifted that cloud..." Sex Roles
As millions of women and girls take shots and pills to stop their periods,
the meaning of menstruation changes. The current marketing trend in hormonal
birth control (Depo-Provera, Seasonale, Seasonique, Lybrel, Anya),
is to attract customers by promising freedom from monthly periods. For many
consumers, menstrual suppression eliminates painful monthly flow, giving
them more control in their lives. For others, menstrual suppression represents
a frightening shift in thinking about the human body and another dangerous
experiment on woman’s health. Period: The
End of Menstruation? interrogates the cultural and medical side
effects of suppression before 'the curse' disappears.
Director / Producer Giovanna Chesler utilizes methods of direct cinema,
cinema verite, and poetic construction to construct her 16mm film. Giovanna
and her crew met with over 50 participants around the United States to understand
the variety of viewpoints on this complex topic. Period
highlights these health practitioners, cultural critics, artists, activists.
Several of these individuals impact the future of menstruation trends while
others are directly affected by these trends. Some see menstruation as an
essential element of the female body and experience. Others believe that
menstruation is not necessary. One doctor extols the benefits of Seasonale,
a pill designed to allow only four bleeding episodes each year (which generated
$50 million in sales in one year.) Another participant explains that hormonal
suppressants can lead to loss of bone density and osteoporosis in young
women. Side effects include depression, cardiac ailments, blood clots, break
through bleeding and loss of libido.
Period equates the experiences and
opinions of every day Americans to medical knowledge. Women and men of diverse
ethnic communities, of varying sexual orientations are included in the film
alongside the health practitioners and theorists. We meet an African American
woman in San Diego who was so troubled by her period that she chose to have
a hysterectomy at age 33, We see a white urban professional in her late
20’s getting a shot of Depo Provera. She tells us that she
has not menstruated in three years. However, a transman living in New York
City chooses to keep his period and claims it as part of his masculinity,
and an artist in San Francisco paints with her menstrual blood.
What is healthy and normal? What is female and private? What is natural?
Period addresses these complex questions
and more. Period: The End of Menstruation? makes a taboo subject visible and audible, serving as a beginning to much
needed public conversation and bringing attention to a pressing women’s
health issue that affects millions of menstruators on a national and global
scale.
Period Web Site
New York Times Feature Article, 4/20/07 by Stephanie Saul
New York Times Video Interview, 4/20/07 by Shayla Harris & S. Saul
Radio Interview
with Giovanna Chesler
Order Period from Cinema
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Upcoming Screenings
March 2, 2009 - 7pm, Doc Watchers, Maysles Cinema, New York, NY
Past Screenings
Connecticut College
University of Michigan, Ann ArborLadyfest Cork, Ireland
Dundee Women's Film Festival, UK
Society for Cinema and Media Studies Conference, Philadelphia PA
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
SUNY Fredonia
American University, Washington DC
University of Victoria, Canada
Metro Cinema, Edmonton, Canada
Marymount Manhattan College
University of Southern California
National Museum of Women in the ArtsSimon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC
Art Beat Portland, Oregon
Bluestockings Bookstore, New York City
Arts Picturehouse, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Women Without Borders Film Festival, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Sexual Health Access, Alberta, Canada
UCSD Women's Center
Mess Hall, Women's
Reproductive Health Video Screening, Chicago
Chicago
Women's Health Center 30th Anniversary Celebration
National Women's Studies Association Conference, Oakland, CA
Malcolm X Library, San Diego, CA
Concordia
University, Montreal
California
State University, San Marcos
Museum of Photographic Arts, SD
Pennsylvania State University
Chatham College
Univ. of Pittsburgh @ Greensburg, PA
University of Indiana, Pennsylvania
Union
College, New York
Univ.
Film & Video Assoc. Conference
Society for Menstrual Cycle Research Conference, Boulder, CO
M.I.T., Cambridge, MA
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Binacom Research
& Production Symposium
