“Film/Video-Based Therapy involves making movies with clients. It draws from several disciplines from cinema therapyexpressive therapynarrative therapyart therapy,[1] digital storytelling, and phototherapy[2] which requires a collaboration to integrate the many dynamic aspects of art and medicine. Joshua Lee Cohen Ph.D., author and co-editor of Video and Filmmaking as Psychotherapy: Research and Practice (published by Routledge in 2015), helped to establish a collaborative effort in forming film/video-based therapy. This form of therapy is about making films with clients, as opposed to cinema therapy, which involves watching films. Dr. Cohen has utilized watching films and mindfulness in his work.[3] Dr. Cohen has been cited in Tuval-Mashiach and Patton’s clinical trial [4] and participated in peer reviewed research on the use of video narrative in cancer research. [5] It is not trademarked for advertising or financial purposes but intended to protect the sanctity of the license for mental health professionals and the use of the word “therapy” when used in conjunction with film/video in the United States.[6] (Other countries may have different policies)

Film/video-based therapy is used in both research and practice. It has several names. Each name has a slightly different purpose for each population.”