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Every year since his first visit to Kiev in 1992, London neurosurgeon Dr Henry Marsh has returned to the Ukraine to perform pro bono operations, train surgeons and recycle desperately needed tools and implements. The situation in the cash-strapped country continues to be dire, and misdiagnosis is rife. It makes for heartbreaking work. For many of the patients he sees it’s too late to make a difference. For others, he must weigh the risks of brain surgery with inferior equipment (a cordless handyman drill) against the consequences of doing nothing. As if that wasn’t difficult enough, Marsh is haunted by an operation he performed on a young girl that went catastrophically wrong…
This remarkable portrait of an extraordinary man won the top prize at HotDocs and was an audience favourite at VIFF. It’s an enthralling film for many reasons: the doctor’s deep core of compassion and altruism; his sometimes grimly humorous camaraderie with a Ukranian colleague, Igor Kurilets, considered a renegade in his country for his desire to set up a specialist neurological clinic; the pressures both men face dealing with very different but in some ways disturbingly similar political bureaucracies. What makes it unforgettable, however, is the prolonged 15-minute brain operation we witness, as gripping as anything in a Hollywood thriller, for which the patient an epileptic named Marian is awake the whole time. With a subtle score by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, this is riveting viewing.
Geoffrey Smith was born in Melbourne, Australia. Winner of numerous awards, including an RTS in 2004 and in 2007, he has made over twenty films for major UK broadcasters and is drawn to observational real life dramas where deep ethical and moral dilemmas abide. Searching for a Killer (1987), The New Man (1999), Breath of Life (2000), The Life Saver (2000), Danger Unexploded Bomb! (2001), Real Life: A Father’s Story (2002), Your Life in Their Hands (2004), The English Surgeon (2007)
Related Links:
"Handy Henry Marsh: brain doctor uses DIY drill" Read the full article about Dr. Henry Marsh in Timesonline
"…a lovely film, the best documentary for a long time" The Guardian
"Deeply touching, resonant and ….very funny" Variety
"This is one extraordinary documentary, approaching hugely emotive subject matter with nimble delicacy and, it has to be said, steely reserve when it comes to filming a brain operation performed under only local anaesthetic. A life-affirming, unforgettable portrait of a true humanitarian, it's crying out for a proper cinema release" Time Out London
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