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Coma
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Directed by Liz Garbus.
While the subject of brain injury is challenging and sometimes frightening for doctors as well patients and their families, few such maladies are as misunderstood as the coma. Many factors come into play when a patient falls into a coma, and it's often difficult to predict what will happen if and when they regain consciousness. Filmmaker Liz Garbus explores the human side of a difficult medical situation in Coma, a documentary that follows four patients at the John F. Kennedy Medical Center's Center for Head Injuries. Each has suffered a coma following an accident of some sort, and as each struggles to regain the life they knew before, their doctors and loved ones must wrestle with tough choices and unhappy realities. Produced for the premium cable television network HBO, Coma was screened in competition at the 2007 Silverdocs Film Festival, a competition founded by the American Film Institute and The Discovery Channel. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 Coma (2007)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
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""Coma" doesn´t pride itself on the technical aspects of the medical condition; it shows the struggle patients and their families go through in order to overcome vegetative and minimally conscious states. The documentary follows four families over the course of one year as daughters, sons and fiancées struggle to regain some aspect of their previous lives in fits and starts, small progress and groundbreaking revelations. It tugs at the heartstrings, perhaps a cliché, but never tells us how to feel with sentimental music or a narrator. In essence, we learn about Roxy, Sean, Tom and Al´Khan through their families and their own individual determination to get back to some sense of normalcy. Running for 102-minutes, none of the patients are able to tell their own stories, as is expected. We are introduced to each with a title card or two explaining their injury and their current medical condition. From there, the journey of each person is tracked from beginnin ... " [More]
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