Sunday, April 25, 2010

You Don't Know Jack


Excellent movie, if you don't know it's a movie about Jack Kevorkian played by Al Pacino. He performed his role perfectly, which is why he's one of the greats in acting. I say that because I was watching a Dr. Kevorkian interview on TV and it matched up perfectly to his demeanor, and I most say he's a bit too egotistical in the fight for end of life choice. I think he viewed it as he's right and their wrong, but it's all about choice, the debate should never have been about him and their is where he failed. I don't think I talk out the movie, because hell it's Dr. Kevorkian. Thumbs up, it's on HBO I don't know if it's on DVD yet. It will take you into the movie, the debate, and have you thinking.

PS If you have a horse ride along, but wish it could sing too, Don't shoot the horse. Because you won't have a horse that sings or a horse.

1 comment:

MooMovie said...

Love him or hate him, agree or disagree with his stance on assisted suicide, Jack Kevorkian makes for good television. Detroit's "Dr. Death" is a polarizing force in medical ethics, a man who believes that a person's right to self-determination includes the right to decide when enough is enough.

Al Pacino is a dead-wringer for Kevorkian (pun intended), the son of Armenian immigrants who escaped the Turkish genocide. He passionately lives the edict that one must disobey laws one feels are immoral. For Kevorkian, that means helping the terminally ill end their suffering and die with dignity, at a time of their choosing, regardless of its cost to him.

HBO's docudrama shows Kevorkian at his best and worst, compassionate with those who ask for his help, acerbic to the point of viciousness with anyone he considers stupid. Kevorkian is not necessarily a nice man, but he is obdurate when it comes to his principles. We see him argue with prosecutors, walk out on court proceedings, lock horns with his attorney Geoffrey Fieger. Nothing sways him in his zeal for allowing individuals suffering from end-stage terminal illness to decide for themselves what—and when--it means to die with dignity.

The talented supporting cast includes big names like Susan Sarandon, Brenda Vaccaro, John Goodman, and Danny Huston, as well as a slew of less-known actors who portray Kevorkian's patients/victims with heartbreaking realism. Make no mistake, however; this is Pacino's show from start to finish. His physical resemblance to the real Kevorkian is uncanny. He rants, he rages, he cajoles, he sympathizes. He assists and he initiates. It is sometimes difficult to remember that we are watching a supremely talented actor and not the man he is portraying.

"You Don't Know Jack" clearly sides with Kevorkian's viewpoint. It does so, however without sensationalism, nor does it dismiss nor trivialize the opposing side. In other words, "You Don't Know Jack" does what television does best: It entertains while challenging viewers to engage in dialogue about a topic that truly matters.
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