Tuesday, January 28, 2025
“Societal Failures Are Dictating What People Do”: Reid Davenport’s ‘Life After’ Connects Assisted Dying With a Fear of Disability
I interviewed Reid Davenport for the Doc Star of the Month column in 2022, the year the Stanford-trained TED fellow nabbed the Directing Award for U.S. Documentary at Sundance for his remarkable debut feature, I Didn’t See You There, which he termed a doc “about disability from an overtly political perspective.” Now the award-winning director returns to Park City with Life After, another doc about disability from an overtly political perspective —though the politics are complicated when the subject is assisted dying. As Davenport himself put it in his director’s statement: “I’m a filmmaker in New York City, living in a progressive milieu where conversations about the ‘right to die’ hinge on treasured values of choice and bodily autonomy. But as a disabled person, I can sense people’s undisguised fear of disability just below the surface. What’s a hot-button dinner party topic for some is utterly sinister for me, as I see people in my life exhibit a higher tolerance for the deaths of disabled people than for non-disabled people.”
It’s through this personal lens that we’re introduced to the story of Elizabeth Bouvia, a disabled Californian who in 1983 sought the “right to die” in a courtroom, sparking a media frenzy that morphed into a contentious national debate. And then, as so often happens with human beings hijacked for causes, she up and disappeared. This mystery prompted Davenport, who like Bouvia has cerebral palsy, to set out to investigate her whereabouts today. Through her story, Davenport explores the contemporary legal status of assisted dying and how legislation is crafted while disregarding input from disabled advocates.
Documentary caught up with Davenport the week before the film’s U.S. Documentary Competition premiere on Life After’s aesthetic choices, the necessity of disabled perspectives in storytelling, and the political entanglement of the “right to die” with the refusal to support conditions of life.
To read my interview visit Documentary magazine.
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