The medicinal use of cannabis by sick children is the topic of a new documentary that’s now showing in limited engagements at theaters nationwide. The documentary, Weed the People, by executive producer Ricki Lake and director Abby Epstein, follows terminally ill children and their families desperate to find a medicine that works.

Lake challenged skeptics of medical marijuana in a television interview with CBS News.

“We’ve been brainwashed to think that this plant doesn’t have medicinal value as a Schedule 1 drug, but yet the government holds a patent on it,” Lake said. “There is now an FDA approved drug for epilepsy. So it’s this hypocrisy.  I think it’s about really informing the public to understand the history. And how this was a medicine for thousands and thousands of years and only hasn’t been a medicine for 80 years.”

Lake explained that the project began through her experience with a young fan and her late husband, who used cannabis to treat chronic pain, anxiety, and ADD. When Lake told Epstein that she was going to accompany a 7-year-old girl, who had contacted her while competing on Dancing with the Stars, on a visit to a medical marijuana doctor, the idea for the film was born.

“Wait, I think this is our next movie,” Epstein said.

Challenging Stigma

Epstein said that they decided to focus on sick children and their families in an effort to preemptively mute any argument that medical marijuana is really just about getting high.

“These are babies – literally babies – in the film going through chemo and you see how much this medicine – in some cases, their parents are crediting it for saving their lives. It’s pretty dramatic,” Epstein said.

Read more from our friends at High Times