On TV: 'Addiction' takes pains to show us real drug abuse
Seattle P-I
March 13, 2007
Addiction is a demon that can slip into anyone's house without warning. Once inside, it can take a lifetime to evict. Television has done little in the way of illuminating how addiction becomes a permanent part of so many lives, preferring to display its ravages for dramatic effect. For screenwriters, drug abuse is an easy way to give a hero defining shadows. Witness this season's engaging story arc about "House's" central character grappling with his Vicodin addiction.
Unscripted television, however, is where the line between compelling depictions and exploitation can get blurred, as is the case with A&E's "Intervention." Each episode follows an addict at one of the lowest coils in his or her downward spiral, confronting the person with a professionally proctored intervention in the last quarter of the show. The viewer is not left to contemplate the subject's healing process as deeply as how messed up that person is. We get 25 percent recovery, 75 percent chaos.
"Intervention's" third season premieres a day after HBO launches its thorough, multiplatform "Addiction" project. The centerpiece of this 14-part series is the feature documentary that achieves everything three seasons of "Intervention" have not.
Education is the goal here, not drama -- although that's inherent to the subject. In taking an illuminative approach, HBO gives audiences a comprehensive series that covers an impressive amount of ground.
"Addiction" consists of nine films by various directors, tackling subjects that run the gamut from weighing the health versus the mental-health factors in addiction to showing the social costs of managed care's ongoing refusal to fund effective treatments.
Its primary purpose, though, is to show the wide-reaching nature of the epidemic. More than 23 million Americans are battling addiction, but only about 10 percent are getting treatment. Blame the secretive nature of substance abuse, twinned with the long-standing false tendency to associate addiction with moral failure.
The main points "Addiction" makes quite well are that drug and alcohol abuse is a brain disease -- and that it's also a young person's affliction, developing in most people between ages 18 and 25.
Thanks to technological innovations in imaging, we can see what a craving looks like: it shows up on monitors as warning-red pools blooming in the brain when an urge is triggered.
In the end, though, it is still television. As if to remind us of that, the documentary opens with Jon Alpert's gruesome, cautionary gripper "Saturday Night in a Dallas ER," where an emergency-room doctor allows cameras to glimpse substance-abuse-related traumas. Some shots make you flinch, including a glimpse at a stab wound sustained by a man under the influence.
"Addiction" is more remarkable for what we don't see in that introductory 90 minutes, such as addicts within the throes of a high. Instead of the too-familiar Partnership For A Drug-Free America tactic, using hysteria and frightening images to smack home the dire nature of the topic, "Addiction's" emphasis is on understanding the disease, innovations in diagnosis and treatment.
From "A Mother's Desperation," to the teenage kid who casually admits to having popped 10 mushroom caps in one sitting ("The Adolescent Addict"), to the crack addict desperate to kick the drug ("The Science of Relapse"), "Addiction" is careful to preserve the dignity of its subjects. Relapse is not a weakness of will, but a reflex that's difficult to control -- perhaps less so with new medications.
Indeed, there's a distinct pro-pharmaceutical bent to "Addiction," enough to give a person pause. A sizable portion of the documentary sings the praises of drugs such as Suboxone, a non-narcotic medication that curbs opiate cravings, and Topiramate, an alcohol-craving blocker still in clinical trials. It also is true that the public is largely unaware of the growing variety of addiction-curbing pharmaceuticals.
They can be life changing. One man confesses his drinking had turned into a 24-hour-a-day, 7-day-a-week affair he could only break off with drug intervention. " It's too bad I didn't come to this realization a long time ago. I can't change that," he said. "But I can determine what's going to happen tomorrow. And I'm not going to drink."
Only after an hour into the documentary do the experts stress that prescriptions are not magic bullets, and that addiction is a chronic ailment that can take a lifetime of sustained vigilance simply to maintain. When you that into account, the heavy emphasis on medicinal intervention raises an eyebrow. Focus on community support and talk therapy seem almost an afterthought.
But there's no question that this series' intentions come from the right place. HBO and its partners, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, have put copious resources into "Addiction" and its accompaniment of 13 short films, airing as "Addiction: The Supplementary Series."
Those shorts will be available on HBO2 in three parts between 8 and 10 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday, followed each night by the premieres of four independent documentaries (two of them airing on Sunday) at 10.
HBO and its partners have also sponsored a 30-city community-outreach effort. The book "Addiction: Why Can't They Just Stop?" is available now, and a DVD set of the series hits stores next Tuesday. Finally, all 14 parts of the series will be available through the channel's On Demand service, and of course, there's plenty of content at hbo.com/addiction.
The Web page for A&E's "Intervention" (aetv.com/intervention/) also offers information, including links to treatment centers and instructions on properly staging a sit-down. The most important part is a form for people interested in having an episode star their ailing loved ones. One section reads, "Please remember that the person suffering from an addiction cannot know about the possible intervention or offer of treatment in order to insure the best chances for success."
Success of what, exactly? An episode?
You can't talk about "Intervention" without acknowledging its vulgarity. This is a show that invites you to drop down a chute and land in a pile of dirty laundry and despair. There's the deceptiveness of its approach; producers tell the subject they're making a documentary on addiction without mentioning the intervention.
This week it follows Ryan, a college dropout and OxyContin addict who injects it up to 15 times a day. Just thinking about a needle going into a vein is enough to make a person squirm, but the cameras capture him doing it several times, once in his devastated mother's home and another at a friend's house -- with children present.
"Intervention's" detractors are right in some respect. This is concentrated trash TV, stronger than mainlining "Cheaters" or "Jerry Springer." Honestly though, at 10 on a Friday night, how fun can it be to watch a kid shoot up?
Not very. It never is, and that idea gives the series value. There are plenty of people who have a Ryan in their lives, or who are some version of that very lost soul.
The occasional episode of "Intervention" can provide reassurance that their battles are not unique. It's an odd balm, even if the fact that "Intervention" isn't solution-oriented TV like "Addiction" may give it a lower worth.
That said, "Intervention" deserves points for revealing one raw truth the HBO series does not -- that family confrontations don't always work. Addiction is not a struggle anyone can underestimate and that slap of harsh honesty, in its own way, helps too.
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