The Pink Pill: Sex, Drugs and Who Has Control

2025

Documentary

IMDb Rating 7.9/10 10 67 67

Plot summary

A documentary that captures a pivotal moment in the ongoing struggle for complete health care equality, at a time when bodily autonomy hangs in the balance.

Top cast

Jess O'Reilly as Self - Interviewee
Stacey B. Lee as Self - Interviewee
Anita Mikkilineni as Self - Interviewee
Joshua Gonzalez as Self - Interviewee
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
816.16 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 28 min
Seeds ...
1.63 GB
1920*1080
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  
23.976 fps
1 hr 28 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by 10 / 10

Impactful, informative, incredible!!n

Amazing film that needs to be in the conversation for women's health. This is so important and delivers a fascinating story. Well done! Not only as a great storytelling, but the music is great. This should be shared with friends and families who want to talk about women's health and body autonomy!!!
Reviewed by 10 / 10

It's About Time!

This film makes the gender disparity in the healthcare system plain! What a great mix of education and entertainment. The movie flowed so well. I've watched it twice and have recommended it to all my friends. Thank you to Cindy and her team and to everyone featured, especially Dr. Rachel Rubin!! Keep going!
Reviewed by 10 / 10

Must See!

Smart, spicy, heartfelt, and absolutely done being polite about inequality. A great victory for women's sexual health. 26-1. Penile rupture v. Drowsiness at bedtime. That captures the audacious confidence of The Pink Pill: Sex, Drugs, and Who Has Control, a documentary that is furious, hilarious, and deeply humane at the same time.This film takes a flamethrower to the double standards baked into medicine, drug approval, and who the system actually works for. Hint: it's not women. It exposes how women's pleasure has historically been treated as optional while men's has been marketed as an emergency. At one point, a researcher shrugs, "Men get four-hour erections, women get told to try yoga." Some opponents claim women are complicated. Others suggest fixing a disorder with chocolate and wine. Misunderstood and insulted for way too long.The interviews are smartly curated, the experts are easy to understand, and the patients seem like your best friends and family. The film keeps things moving with playful graphics, tight editing, and a rhythm that makes dense medical history surprisingly bingeable. These are real people, real relationships, and real consequences. It never talks down to the audience; it just presents the facts and lets the hypocrisy embarrass itself.By the end of the movie, The Pink Pill feels less like a documentary and more like a mic drop. It's informative without being preachy, funny without being flippant, and angry without losing hope. This is a film that makes you laugh, then feel sad, then mad, and then it makes you want to change things. Rarely has a takedown of systemic bias felt so entertaining...and this necessary. It deserves wide audiences, uncomfortable conversations, and applause for finally asking who actually holds power here today. More than once, I found myself asking, "How is this real?"
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