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Extraordinary Measures
Extraordinary Measures These boys have been in better movies.
A Ford wreck. Grade: C
Director: Tom Vaughan (What Happens in Vegas)
Screenplay: Robert Nelson Jacobs (Flushed Away) from Geeta Anand book "The Cure: How a Father Raised $100 Million - And Bucked the Medical Establishment - in a Quest to Save His Children"
Cast: Harrison Ford (Star Wars), Brendan Fraser (Journey to the Center of the Earth)
Rating: PG
Now I remember why I didn't care for Lorenzo's Oil—too much sentiment over kids with diseases. Similarly, Extraordinary Measures, a typical medical melodrama about a weepy dad, John Crowley (Brendan Fraser), and a crusty scientist, Dr. Robert Stonehill (Harrison Ford), who jointly attempt to beat the odds of the deadly muscle killer, Pompe's disease.

Perhaps I just yearn to learn more about the science of the battle and endure less of the strings and piano extracting tears as the family and kids forcefully enjoy each other in the face of death in a year or so for two of Crowley's children.

As executive producer, Ford can well go over the top with his stereotypically mad scientist anger and cynicism without director Tom Vaughan telling him to tone it down. However it would have been a better movie had Vaughan done so; hey, Ford's Dr. Stonehill is a composite of the medical people who worked on a drug that would at least arrest the disease's development. Why couldn't writer Robert Nelson Jacobs just create a more reasonable curmudgeon? Maybe Ford wanted it that way. Such is the power of a bankable star and a formula that lives any time a kid's disease can "inspire."

The saving factor of Extraordinary Measures is its touching on the modern "information flow" idea about teams not competing with each other but rather sharing knowledge world wide in a scenario where everyone wins. The competition is within the company as Dr. Stonehill stonewalls his discoveries and the company he works for promotes team competition on the same research. As China works out the Google conundrum, NYT's Tom Friedman has speculated that the Communist Party must allow this flow, symbolized by the wide net of Google's search engine, for the old regime to survive.

Who'd have thought such as mediocre film as this could be an allegory about global politics?



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