I thought it was excellent.
Too much time spent on the politics aspect though; they could easily have said the same thing in half the time.
The girl at the end was classic for us to watch but came across very badly to your ordinary viewer.
Obviously she was fucked and felt like shit; but its a shame she couldnt offer some positive words on the exp she just had and a positive outlook of the sort: "well that was an amazing exp but it has to end sometime; i feel trashed now but what i got from it far outweighed what i may have lost" (in her case probably half her cerebral cortex)
The same woman at the start suggesting she took the drugs coz she HAD to, to last that long, was disappointing. I dont see that as a reason which we should use to defend use of party drugs. Or at least not the main one.
I couldn't believe the policeman said what he said. As he didnt imply there was anything wrong with what people were doing. I'm thinking he would be in a bit of trouble.
The research doctor helping get the msg across that recreational drug users, esp XTC users, r not junkies but normal, if anything successful, people, was a godsend.
The best thing though was the interviews involving the ~20yr old guys and girls. Everything they said was spot on and they came across exactly as they should have; level-headed, responsible, mature, normal people and EDUCATED about what they were doing.
I esp liked how they recognised that XTC use was occasional and seen as a priveledge, not taken often and never for granted.
(just realised some of those people r BLs. Thanks guys; Tars, Cammac, anyone else)
Its just a shame that the viewing population of this documentary will not be as wide-spread as it should be.