https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/four-videos-to-watch
Steve points out that he "did not fund the film or have any say in the editorial direction of the film." His participation was limited to his speaking part, and he has reservations about some elements of the film. Steve links to and quotes an article by an anon with similar concerns:
Although there was much I appreciated about Died Suddenly (e.g. it touched upon the history of elitist population control which I presented detailed evidence of here alongside a summary of the known previous attempts to develop and deploy sterilizing vaccines on the public), I feel the lack of editorial control will be extremely problematic later on. Since easily falsifiable information exists in the video that will be focused on in any attempt to debunk it, that will significantly weaken its message and allow the vaccine blood clots to be associated with other unprovable conspiracy theories.
This is a shame because the blood clot aspect of the film is so strong and can easily stand on its own. Additionally, I feel it is very likely that when “died suddenly” is searched in the future, instead of the large numbers of news reports emerging that show where this happened, we will instead be greeted with an endless number of articles debunking those parts of the movie.
Fyi "a Midwestern doctor" made a shortened version just covering the clots
https://amidwesterndoctor.substack.com/p/what-is-causing-the-died-suddenly