We don’t know how. We don’t know when. But death comes for us all. To be human is to wrestle with this truth and with the great unanswered question: How do we live with death in our eye? We can deny, we can rail, we can challenge, we can accept. What is our story, and will it sustain us at the end? “Into the Night: Portraits of Life and Death,” a two-hour documentary, features men and women of uncommon eloquence and intelligence who are grappling with these questions. For them death is no longer an abstraction far off in the future, it is real. They come from all walks of life, all ages, dying and healthy, believers and unbelievers, well known and obscure. These are people who have been shocked into mortality and are forever changed. They have stories to tell, and we can listen and learn from them.
Direction
Whitney's patient, unhurried intimacy with subjects
Writing
Caitlin Doughty's matter-of-fact wisdom cuts through sentimentality

Director
Helen Whitney
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Director Helen Whitney spent six years filming subjects, originally planning a single narrative before realizing the mosaic structure better mirrored how we actually encounter death—suddenly, from multiple directions at once.
This quietly influenced the 'death positive' movement that exploded on social media through 2020-2023, with Caitlin Doughty's appearance here predating her YouTube fame by several years.
No ratings yet
Sign in to join the discussion — comments are spoiler-gated to your watch progress.
Discussion starters