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God Knows Where I Am Poster

God Knows Where I Am

2016 | 97m | English

(1081 votes)

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Popularity: 0.2 (history)

Director: Jedd Wider, Todd Wider
Writer:
Staring:
Details

Well-educated, New Hampshire mother, Linda Bishop, was determined to stay free of the mental health system after her early release from a 3 year commitment to New Hampshire State Hospital. Instead, she became a prisoner of her own mind, a fate which she documents in one of the most evocative and chilling accounts of mental illness and of our systemic failure to protect those suffering from it.
Release Date: Apr 07, 2016
Director: Jedd Wider, Todd Wider
Writer:
Genres: Drama, Mystery, History, Documentary
Keywords biography, based on true story, mental health
Production Companies Wider Film Projects
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 03, 2025
Entered: May 07, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Lori Singer Linda Bishop (voice)
Paul Appelbaum Himself - Professor of Psychiatry
Joan Bishop Herself - Linda's Sister
Kevin Carbone Himself - Prospective Home Buyer
Wayne DiGeronimo Himself - Assistant Deputy Medical Examiner
James E. Duggan Himself - New Hampshire Supreme Court
Jennie Duval Herself - Chief Medical Examiner
Lora Goss Herself - Home Owner
Judith E. Kolada Herself - Occupational Therapist
Michael Maggiani Sheriff Wells
Name Job
Jedd Wider Director
Todd Wider Director
Gerardo Puglia Director of Photography
Bob Schils Gaffer
Lisa Starace Visual Effects Producer
Sarah Jennings Property Master
Paul Cantelon Music
Tom Paul Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Jade Milan Visual Effects Designer
Brian Raby Key Grip
Andrew McKay Digital Intermediate
Rob Mabin Gaffer
Keiko Deguchi Editor
Ivor Guest Music
Chris Monaco Visual Effects Designer
Matt Hamm Camera Technician
Matthew Schneider Digital Intermediate
Bill Orrico Dialogue Editor
Eliott Taylor Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Name Title
Todd Wider Producer
Jedd Wider Producer
Robert Logan Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

CharlesTatum
8.0

This slow burn documentary about a homeless woman with mental illness hit close to home in more than one scene. In the cold New Hampshire countryside, a man looking in the windows of a large empty farm house for sale by a distant owner makes a startling discovery- the body of a woman in the livin ... g room. An investigation reveals the woman's name, and a journal detailing her four weeks in the house subsisting on apples and water from a nearby brook. The film makers then delve into the life of this Linda Bishop, exploring her relatives, mental illness, and inability to get help before it was too late. With Lori Singer reading Bishop's entries from her journal, and the film maker's access to the empty house that Bishop died in (including the actual items she was using during her lonely stay), this should have hit as hard as "Dear Zachary" or "Streetwise," two other documentaries that dealt with life, death, and mental illness. Linda's story is a sad one, the pain she unknowingly inflicted on friends and family members is still raw. Some might see her daughter as cold and aloof, loving her mother but hating the illness she's labeled as "Linda Bishop," but speaking from the standpoint of a child who grew up in a household ravaged by mental illness, I could totally relate to her needing to cut ties to her mother. The revelation about Linda's husband Steve doesn't have the impact I think the film makers were going for, and there is a lull in the middle of the documentary. The state mental health department is blamed for Linda's downfall, but for every story about a state facility releasing someone before they were truly ready, another could be made about someone who was being held against their will. You can't make anyone take their medications so Linda also bears some responsibility for her own actions, and in the end, her own death (she was literally across the street from other homes where she could have found help if she had chose to take it). "God Knows Where I Am" is a sad film, not angry, and it's sobering to think that this goes on a thousandfold across the country. Bishop's family was lucky to get her story told. (* * * *) out of five stars. Rated (TV-PG), and contains some adult situations

Jun 23, 2021