Serving newspaper readers since 1975... "Fresh Air" listeners since 1985...Rowan University students since 1998... Online visitors since 2007...
Actor Joe Pantoliano Becomes A Director, And Champions Compassion for "Mental Dis-Ease," In New Documentary

Beginning today, Amazon has begun offering exclusive distribution of a new documentary by Joe Pantoliano, the actor long familiar from such films and TV shows as Risky Business, EZ Streets and The Matrix. But this time, as writer-producer-director of No Kidding?!! Me, Too!, the performer known as Joey Pants isn't hiding behind a role. He's being as honest as he can, about his personal battles with depression and other forms of what he calls "mental dis-ease," and is encouraging others to do likewise...
The approach behind No Kidding, which is several years is the making, is to get people to talk -- and to listen closely as they do -- about various mental ailments and stresses facing them. Pantoliano, as his own Exhibit A, talks to his therapist, his loved ones and to strangers, about his own problems dealing with fame, self-worth, substance abuse and other things. He's open, and honest, and, in this context, very vulnerable.
But what he's after, as both the maker of this documentary and its principal correspondent, isn't to tell his own story, but to listen to other people tell theirs. "To know all of you," he says, "is to know me." And while that may sound self-centered or selfish, it's actually the reverse. Listen to these stories, he's saying, and you may learn about yourself.
And it's not just theory. Joey Pants talks, individually and collectively, with a handful of people who have been through a lot. A suicidal surgeon. A young woman who becomes a self-mutilating cutter. A young man who throws himself out a ninth-story window. And so on, from military veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury to others with clinical depression.
Near the end of No Kidding, several of them are gathered, in an intimate circle, to tell their stories. Jordan, the attempted suicide, tells his story of surviving that attempt, and deciding to move forward with his life, despite crippling injuries. As he's talking, Casey, the young woman who had cut herself repeatedly, so relates with Jordan, and considers him so brave, that she grabs his hand, then weeps openly and gratefully.
"I've had those same thoughts," she says, referring to his checklist of ways he would and wouldn't consider killing himself. Hearing someone else admit to the same things, she tells him, gives her strength.
Most of this touching, tender documentary is like that. In another scene, Pantoliano is walking, in front of the Vietnam Memorial, with Kelly Kennedy, a health reporter for the Army Times, who recounts some of the stories she reported from the current war. As her stories get more horrifying, the camera gets closer, so that only her face, and her words, fill the space.
When she's through describing her first-hand account of war,the impact is both emotional and instructive. It's not amazing that many soldiers who survive come home with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. What's amazing is that anyone doesn't.
No Kidding?!! Me Too! can be purchased from Amazon, in its full 73-minute length, by clicking HERE. Next month, on May 24, a shortened version will be televised on public television by New York's WNET, and may get wider distribution elsewhere. But why wait?
If you think you, or someone you know, could benefit from the facts and stories and examples in this non-preachy, casually acessible documentary, there's no better move than to act now. For more information on Pantoliano's nonprofit organization, visit the No Kidding Me 2! website HERE. And for the latest, celebrity-filled public service announcement about this topic, featuring Harrison Ford and others, watch the YouTube video HERE.
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
DAVID BIANCULLI
Founder / Editor
DIANE WERTS
Managing Editor
CONTRIBUTORS
ED BARK
Uncle Barky's Bytes
P.J. BEDNARSKI
I Like to Watch
MARK BIANCULLI
The Son Also Criticizes
TOM BRINKMOELLER
Raised on MTM
BILL BRIOUX
TV Feeds My Family
THERESA CORIGLIANO
Terri TV
ERIC GOULD
The Cold Light Reader
DIANE HOLLOWAY
Holloway's Couch
NOEL HOLSTON
The Grassy Noel
GERALD JORDAN
Crossing Jordan
ED MARTIN
Ed Martin's TV Mix
ERIC MINK
Tiny Tin Voice
ALAN PERGAMENT
Still TalkinTV
Sign up for a
FREE subscription
for TVWW updates
Leave a comment