Thin
Thin

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- 74/100 based on 1,978 votes

The story of four women suffering from anorexia and bulimia in South Florida.... (Full plot summary below)

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Full Plot Details

The story of four women suffering from anorexia and bulimia in South Florida.

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Movie Reviews

Common Sense Media - 10/10 by Liz PerleGripping anorexia docu; watch with your kids.
I on the Arts - 10/10 by Deborah KriegerWhat I found interesting while watching the film is that no attention is paid to aspects of aspects of society, especially in the United States, that could very well have played a part in these women and girl developing such severe eating disorders.
Flick Filosopher - 6/10 by MaryAnn JohansonI thought I had issues with food -- I just like it too much. But to see the four women portrayed in Lauren Greenfield's startling documentary Thin is to see people at war not only with food but with their own minds and bodies.
User Review - 10/10 by Whitney Bthe best documental i've ever seen about anorexia. It makes us think about how our brains are being washed making us think about thin as beauty.
User Review - 10/10 by Kate PThis documentary is incredibly accurate in portraying the struggles in treatment. It also gives a realistic outlook on relapses, and the amount of times treatment is sometimes needed.
User Review - 10/10 by Theresa PThis documentary is so thought provoking for me, having spent nearly my whole life too thin because of complications with CF - and forcing myself at times to eat and drink supplements for the sole purpose of staying healthy enough to combat an illness that's purpose was to kill me... The whole time dealing with the ignorance of the general publics' comments: "I wish I could eat like you do and stay so thin..." Not knowing of course, the magnitude of their statement and my silent thoughts that I'd trade them in a second. My heart really hurts for anyone with a psychological disorder so profound that their will to live is overcome by such destructive disorders.
User Review - 10/10 by Yuriati THaving been struggling with body image issues when growing up myself, this documentary breaks my heart into tiny little pieces. This is a very inspiring and powerful story, definitely one of the best documentary ever made.
User Review - 10/10 by Karia QThis is a powerful, depressing documentary about a live-in rehabilitation facility which treats women with eating disorders using a mixture of talk and art therapy, close monitoring of their meals, surprise searches of their rooms, and Orwellian control over their social lives. Several women are followed closely throughout their treatment and their conditions are extremely sad as, for example, whey one sees a double chin where there simply is none. But just as disturbing for me was the protrayal of the doctors and staff treating the patients. In one instance, a patient, Shelly, is accused by her doctor of having an uneaten veggie burger discovered in her room, forbidden contraband in a world where no purses, bags or packages in which to conceal your prescribed meals are allowed in the cafeteria. She vigorously denies possessing the uneaten food but we are then shown a meeting of the staff treating her in which the incident is cited to justify the application of the label sneaky to her and she is singled out for stepped up monitoring. Later, when it is revealed that the burger was discovered in a common bathroom and had belonged to another patient, Shelly has to drag an apology out of her doctor who appears to continue to view her with distrust anyways. In addition to the patients and their doctors there are also some fasicnating and even harrowing scenes involving the patientsâ(TM) families. The film doesnâ(TM)t get very deeply into the causes of the disorders being treated but focuses its attention almost exclusively on the treatment including the lives they lead in the facility, their meals and daily weigh-ins, the bonds formed and broken between the patients, and the consequences of their inadequate health insurance sometimes forces patients to leave before they or their doctors think they are ready. This is a stark look at eating disorders, their consequences, and their treatment with no judgments or preaching just the truth, twenty four frames per second. It was brave of the subjects of this documentary to tell their stories and the result is a fascinating if disturbingly sad documentary.
User Review - 10/10 by Ricardo RProbably one of the most jarring documentaries I've ever seen.
User Review - 10/10 by Kiki Rbrilliant documenary and book. Lauren Greenfield was very easily able to portray the desparity of these women.

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