I have mixed feelings about the film, but the negatives probably stem from my unrealistic expectations.
The film is in the New Zealand International Film Festival and it has been screened at quite a number of venues throughout New Zealand. I was thrilled to see that it would be screened 3 times at the cinema closest to me. I watched it two days ago.
The film is an enormous achievement. That Jen had the strength of spirit and foresight to start filming early on in the illness and to put herself and her illness out there for everyone to judge is amazing.
However I felt that a number of issues weren't sufficiently fleshed out and resolved. For example, Karina's case. Per Fink comes across as relatively reasonable. We see the protests to get Karina back home, but when she is home we see her sitting on her bed in a well lit room looking quite healthy. And she doesn't say anything. And so it's easy to think, well, maybe she was helped by the treatment. (I'm not saying that she was - just that the story as presented in the film could well lead people to think that).
I didn't get why quite a bit of time was spent on images of a setting (or rising?) sun seen from a forest road. Was the point that Jen was getting pleasure vicariously through images filmed in real time by her film crew who were in places that she couldn't be?
It could be just me, but prolonged images of adults crawling on the floor and up stairs make me cringe. I really hope it's just me, but I found those images lingered in a way that the persuasive points like how MS was hysterical paralysis right up until technology developed to allow for scans revealing brain damage did not.
There were lots of positives. I loved Ren's song (
@trickthefox ). And the images of the shoes in the Millions Missing protests around the world. The inclusion of the many people around the world with ME with great stories to tell. The girl in the pool - sorry, I have forgotten her name - was radiant, she and her family were a shining example of how to cope. Nancy Klimas was great. And more.
It was brave of Jen to show how we end up trying all sorts of seemingly bizarre remedies in our desperation to get well - a point well made. And the film does show very poingantly the impact of the illness on Jen and Omar's relationship. Jen is humble in her portrayal of the Millions Missing campaign, making it clear that it was very much a team effort and probably greatly downplaying her role in making that happen.
In the screening I attended, there were about 15 people including me in the audience. Judging from the slightly unkempt hair and the blankets (I was envious of their forethought) and the way people slowly slid down in their seats during the film, many of the viewers had ME or were accompanying a person with ME. There was a group of 4 healthy people who sounded to be attending most of the film festival films.
I've been looking for reviews of the film arising from its screenings in New Zealand but I haven't seen any.
My son (also with ME) wasn't keen to go, so I said I would check it out and see if I thought it was worth persuading him. I don't think I will drag him there. Partly it's because I think he doesn't need or want to see quite so vividly what severe ME looks like. But also its because I think some of this film (and I think he would also have a very low tolerance for images of people crawling too) would make him question, more than he does already, if he is really sick.
I don't think I'll take family or friends along either because I couldn't bear it if they came out feeling more uncertain that we are really ill. Maybe, and probably, I am just being too fearful about that.
Maybe the kind of film I really want to see that is unequivocally convincing about the biomedical nature of ME just won't be possible until we get the equivalent of the brain scans in MS.
I will probably go to the next screening, to watch it again and pick up on the things I have missed.
I've struggled to put in to words what I thought of the film. When I left the cinema, I didn't feel validated or uplifted. I mostly felt sad. And I guess that's ok, because the current reality of ME is pretty sad and the film did show that very well.
I'd like to hear what others have thought about Unrest.