The Business of Being Born Movie Review
The Business of Being Born Review
"The Business of Being Born" Overview

Rating: NR
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Abby EpsteinProducer : Abby Epstein,Ricki Lake,Paulo Netto,Amy Slotnick
Screenwiter :
Starring : Ricki Lake
There were two roadblocks to my catching The Business of Being Born in a
theater, though I now wish I'd spent the money to give it the box office
support. The first was that my only knowledge of Ricki Lake had been as a talk
show host, and I stay away from viewing any of that type of material. The
second was that, as a woman who may eventually give birth, I was extremely
queasy at the thought of watching live births happen on camera. I love a good
horror movie, but why torture myself watching what everyone says is the most
painful experience of any woman's life?
What turned me on to watching the film was reflecting on the combined reactions
of many of my peers, who are now mothers. While their children are all healthy
and strong, most of them have had complaints about treatment during their
deliveries, and all of them have been forced out of the hospital as soon as
possible, after what could be the most physically traumatic experience they
have yet encountered.
As it turns out, the main reason why The Business of Being Born is so useful to
watch is that it provides a three-dimensional definition of an alternative
option to giving birth in a hospital setting. From several points of view we
learn that this option -- midwifery and birthing centers specifically -- is
safe, educated and trained, affordable, and in fact comparable in healthy
results to the treatment of a standard obstetrician. Filmmaker Abby Epstein,
who is contemplating her own options, thinks of all the arguments against
giving birth at home. The course of the film is bracketed by variety of
subjects surrounding birth, from the drugs that mothers are given and what the
process chemically does to both mother and child, to what is covered by
insurance. The interviewees speak engagingly in their disregard for all the
stereotypes about why it may be risky to give birth in your own space.
We follow several women who are at the end of their pregnancies and have chosen
to give birth at home with a midwife, or in a birthing center. Their vocal
decision-making process, which includes their partners' comments, is
intertwined with many medical personnel from both the world of "western"
medicine and birthing centers explaining the benefits of midwifery and natural
childbirth. A few snippets of archival footage explain practices from the
beginning of the twentieth century to convey how little care we have always
taken with this process. The history lesson isn't entirely followed through on,
but you get the point quickly anyway.
Granted, Business is a film with a fairly singular point of view, and if you're
expecting an egalitarian comparison of paths toward motherhood, this will not
be it. On the other hand, this focus on the after-effect of the birth process
on both mother and newborn is one that nobody else has really ever taken on.
More deserving in respect to its approach is that it's not a commercial for one
doctor or one birthing center so much as a film trying to educate women about
the questions to take into consideration in order to bring their child into the
world. That said, there is a minor attempt to even out the tone by showing one
mother who originally chose home birth but who required an operation because
her child was in a dangerous position.
Admittedly, I still shook when watching a baby literally come out of a mother
more than once, but I also noticed that I shook more violently seeing a woman's
abdomen get torn open for a cesarean. When it comes to something so personal,
and possibly so lasting, as the very beginning of a life, The Business of Being
Born is an effective glimpse into the need for personal research, and a solid
argument for making informed choices.
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Review by Rachel Gordon
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