![]() | Starring: Nick Nolte, Susan Sarandon, Peter Ustinov, Kathleen Wilhoite, Gerry Bamman Director: George Miller (II) Format: Closed-captioned Dolby PAL Surround Sound Released: 01 Jul 1999 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |


Augusto, an economist, & Michaela, a linguist, were a well educated, well to do, multi-lingual couple with a little son named Lorenzo who was precocious beyond his years. He spoke English & Italian fluently, as well as the language spoken in the community in Africa in which he spent his very early years. When he returned to the United States at about the age of five, his behavior started to change He came overly aggressive & was given to emotional outbursts. After much angst on the part of the Odones over what could be wrong, they were finallly told that their son suffered from ALD, which was the functional equivalent of having their son being given a death sentence, as there was no cure for this degenerative disease.
This well educated couple refused to accept the death sentence meted out to their son by the medical establishment. With no medical background, they disregarded conventional medical wisdom & went about trying to find a cure for their son, in a quest so remarkable & so moving, as to inspire absolute awe in the viewer. A more caring or loving set of parents would be hard to find. Lorenzo is surely loved. Together, Augusto & Michaela take on the medical establishment. What they ended up discovering rocked the medical world. To find out just what it was that they specificallly did, you will just have to watch the movie.
Director George Miller does a masterful job in directing this film, avoiding the obvious sentimental traps & playing the film out in a very straightforward way. The ravages of this disease are fully played out & are not sugarcoated in any way. Nick Nolte gives a bravura performance as Augusto Odone, though his Italian accent needs a little work. He is superb as the father who transfers his emotion to the task of learning biochemistry in order to ascertain just what factors are at the root of his son's disease. His way of dealing with his son's illness is intellectual & methodical.
Susan Sarandon is sensational as Michaela Odone, a woman of such strength, resolution, & determination that it would be hard to find another like her. Her pain is palpable, as she sees her son deteriorate, but she refuses to take the path of least resistance where Lorenzo is concerned. In the face of daunting odds, she perseveres with Lorenzo, talking to him, as well as stimulating & challlenging him. A notable performance is also given by Kathleen Wilhuite who plays the part of Dierdre Murphy, Michaela's sister & Lorenzo's loving aunt.
This is a sensational film that avoids alll the maudlin, sentimental traps laid out in the formulaic disease of the week movies one often finds. This is a deftly directed, well acted film, informative & moving. It is a film that will stay with the viewer, long after the credits have rolled off the screen. Bravo!

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