Fanlight Productions: Social Issue Films
SummaryText
Fanlight Productions is a distributor of film and video works that address cross-cultural social issues including healthcare, mental health, professional ethics, gender and family issues.
Founded by independent filmmakers more than twenty years ago, Fanlight Productions work to create a select collection of cross-cultural educational programmes which are independent in their vision, emotionally and intellectually engaging in their approach, and accurate and up-to-date in their content.
Most of the films represent the personal vision of independent filmmakers; others have been created by broadcast producers and by organisations with similar fields of interest.
Listed below are two examples of films distributed by Fanlight Productions:
Founded by independent filmmakers more than twenty years ago, Fanlight Productions work to create a select collection of cross-cultural educational programmes which are independent in their vision, emotionally and intellectually engaging in their approach, and accurate and up-to-date in their content.
Most of the films represent the personal vision of independent filmmakers; others have been created by broadcast producers and by organisations with similar fields of interest.
Listed below are two examples of films distributed by Fanlight Productions:
- Worlds Apart: A Four-Part Series on Cross-Cultural Healthcare
by Maren Grainger-Monsen, MD, and Julia Haslett
Stanford University Center for Biomedical Ethics
This film series examines the role sociocultural barriers play in patient-provider communication and in the provision of healthcare services for culturally and ethnically diverse patients. The series follows patients and families faced with critical medical decisions, as they navigate their way through the health care system in the United States. Filmed in patients' homes, neighbourhoods and places of worship, as well as hospital wards and community clinics, "Worlds Apart" aims to provide a balanced look at both the patients' cultures and the culture of medicine (full series: 47 minutes, 2003). - Community Voices: Exploring Cross-Cultural Care through Cancer
by Jennie Greene & Kim Newell
Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention
Community Voices uses cancer as a lens to explore the many ways that differences in culture, race and ethnicity affect health and the delivery of healthcare services in the United States. The film explores six theme issues: language, interpretation and communication styles; the meanings of illness; patterns of help seeking; social and historical context; core cultural issues; and building bridges (69 minutes, 2001).
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