WASHINGTON, D.C. − Chris Hemsworth is joining a growing list of Hollywood stars opening up about caring for their aging and sick loved ones.
Care advocates gathered at the Australian Embassy in Washington, D.C. on Nov. 5 for a screening of Hemsworth's new documentary, "A Road Trip to Remember," which follows Hemsworth and his father, Craig Hemsworth, on a motorbike trip across Australia. Craig Hemsworth is one of over 55 million people worldwide living with dementia or Alzheimer's disease.
"I just find myself wanting to spend more time with him," Hemsworth says in the film's trailer.
Hemsworth's documentary will premiere on National Geographic and be available for streaming on Disney Plus and Hulu on Nov. 23, just six months after Bradley Cooper's "Caregiving" documentary released on PBS in June. Emma Heming Willis has become the face of spousal caregiving through various media appearances and her new book, "The Unexpected Journey," where she talks about caring for her husband Bruce Willis. Seth Rogen produced a documentary that released in January 2025, "Taking Care," which brought viewers inside his family's life as he and his wife cared for his wife's mother.
"For many years, people just didn't talk about it," said Jane Root, CEO and founder of Nutopia, the film production company that made Hemsworth's documentary. "And suddenly, influential people like Chris and Seth and people are suddenly, like, this is something that needs to be talked about. We need to stop being scared of it, we need to take away the stigma of it."






