Review of the Movie Awakenings

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The movie Awakenings is a touching movie with an inspiring plot line and characterization. The movie tries to show how one doctor will do anything to help people who catatonic. Awakenings helps us understand why we must be willing to challenge conventional wisdom to help those in need. This movie which is based on a true story is an inspiring story about a doctor willing to push the limits, and it is best examined through the plot line, the characterization, and some of the drawbacks of the movie Awakenings. The movie begins in 1920 with a young Leonard Lowe showing outwards signs of disease still yet unknown. The movie then jumps to 1969, where Dr. Malcolm Sayer works at a Chronic Hospital in New York City. During his time at the hospital, he begins to have a theory that people suffering from post-encephalitis syndrome can be cured, so he begins his experiments to prove his theory. After his tests, he believes that a drug named L-DOPA will help his patients. The doctor give L-DOPA to his patients, which causes them to wake up, but in the end the medicine wears off and the patients revert to their previous state. The plot line has very high points of emotional distress, but there is also times of light hearted fun to relieve the pressure of the conflict. In the first scene of the movie the audience are back into 1920s New York, with Leonard and his friends, but Leonard is suffering from the encephalitis disease, and the subsequent aftermath of his disease. The movie then moves on to Dr. Sayer who is hired just out of convenience for the hospital. We then move on over an unspecific period of time as Dr. Sayer is at the hospital, but he is making progress with his patients. Second, there is an underlying love story with Dr. Sayer ... ... middle of paper ... ...haracter is relatable to the audience for those who have relatives who are experiencing mental issues. The movie is has moments that will break your heart, inspires people to do more with themselves, but with some small plot discrepancies that could have been worked out with a few extra minutes of the movie instead of hanging us out to dry. However, Ebert raises a question “How much of the self we treasure so much is simply a matter of good luck, of being spared in a minefield of neurological chance?” (Ebert). The movie raises questions on what we do to those who need our love and support. The best part of the movie is how they come awake and get to experience a part of life before the medicine wears off and they go back into their catatonic state. The movie is worth the time and money, it is family friendly, and a sure classic to inspire you family for many years.

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