![Lorenzo's Oil [DVD]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71cqEPKY-OL.jpg)




Oscar nominee Nick Nolte and Academy Award winner Susan Sarandon star in this powerful and unforgettable drama based on a true story.For Augusto and Michaela Odone (Nolte and Sarandon), the news that their five-year-old son, Lorenzo, has a rare terminal disease is sobering, to learn there is no known cure is devastating. Despite the prognosis, the Odones embark on an extraordinary mission of love, consulting and sometimes colliding with the world's top doctors and scientists in the quest to save their son. Their relentless struggle tests their marriage, their beliefs and the boundaries of conventional medicine in this critically acclaimed hit from director George Miller (The Witches of Eastwick). Review: Lorenzo s oil movie - Good movie but sad Review: First time seeing this movie for my online class - I had to watch a movie dealing with some sort of special needs scenario for my Education online class. I googled possibilities for movies to watch (as I'm not a big movie person) and this one was among the top choices. I rented it via desertcart and it was a very good movie. Based on a true story with several touching moments (including the ending credits) that's very inspiring to anyone who watches it. It does feel drawn out at times, but I think it is necessary for the view to understand all the terminology and medical terms and pictures that are played out through the movie. There are some scenes that could be deemed a little disturbing for children, so I be on your best judgement for viewing. (PG-13)





| Contributor | Ann Hearn, Doug Mitchell, George Miller, Gerry Bamman, James Rebhorn, Kathleen Wilhoite, Margo Martindale, Nick Nolte, Peter Ustinov, Susan Sarandon, Zack O'Malley Greenburg Contributor Ann Hearn, Doug Mitchell, George Miller, Gerry Bamman, James Rebhorn, Kathleen Wilhoite, Margo Martindale, Nick Nolte, Peter Ustinov, Susan Sarandon, Zack O'Malley Greenburg See more |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,460 Reviews |
| Format | Color, Multiple Formats, NTSC |
| Genre | Art House & International, Drama |
| Initial release date | 2010-06-01 |
| Language | English |
V**F
Lorenzo s oil movie
Good movie but sad
R**Z
First time seeing this movie for my online class
I had to watch a movie dealing with some sort of special needs scenario for my Education online class. I googled possibilities for movies to watch (as I'm not a big movie person) and this one was among the top choices. I rented it via amazon and it was a very good movie. Based on a true story with several touching moments (including the ending credits) that's very inspiring to anyone who watches it. It does feel drawn out at times, but I think it is necessary for the view to understand all the terminology and medical terms and pictures that are played out through the movie. There are some scenes that could be deemed a little disturbing for children, so I be on your best judgement for viewing. (PG-13)
E**N
Rare, fascinating and heart-rending tale about parenthood and medical research
George Miller is an Australian physician who took advantage of his medical background to create this one-of-a-kind movie. We are taken behind the headlines of medical research to see some of its inner workings in a true story about a rare and deadly disease, Adrenal Leukodystrophy. Sir Peter Ustinov plays the role of one of the leading researcher in the study of this disease, the basis of which scientists were just beginning to unravel Nick Nolte and Susan Sarandon play role of the parents of a boy, Lorenzo, who has the disease. They are not passive regarding his illness but decidedly proactive to the point of sponsoring a meeting to helping the scientists work together to find a cure. At that meeting scientists discuss their findings and Lorenzo's parents realize that one of them, working in cell culture, has discovered a potentially curative oil. Shrugging off the warnings by the scientists that it would be difficult if not impossible to produce this oil and to use it in their son, they call around the world until they find someone capable and willing to purify enough to try the new treatment in Lorenzo. The rest of the movie is the unfolding of the triumph and tragedy of the disease in Lorenzo and other affected children. This movie is unusual, not only in its focus on medical research, but also in the fact that director Miller cast all of the scientists in the movie with actual scientists, except Ustinov only. Also of interest is the fact that the chemist who purified the first batch of Lorenzo’s oil, is played by himself. This is not a light-hearted feel-good movie, but a deep and moving portrayal of the real-life struggle of two parents to fight in cooperation with, and at times against, the medical research establishment in an effort to save their son.
J**R
Excellent Educational Tool
I bought this to use in my high school science classroom to study the scientific method. Usually students are taught the scientific method as a series of steps that are followed and then it's over. This movie showed them how science really works, and also provided some important discussions. The entire scientific method unit was taught using this movie and included the following: - In the real world, the steps of the scientific method are often repeated. Augusto Odone tests a hypothesis, and when the results don't back his hypothesis, he does more research and develops a new hypothesis. - When research on actual organisms/substances isn't practical, scientists use models to conduct their research. Augusto Odone develops 2 models, one using a kitchen sink to describe the action of long-chain fatty acids in the human body, and another using paper clips to describe the formation of these acids. - Collaboration and communication between scientists isn't as common as we think, and sometimes research simply involves putting the work of several scientists together. Michaela Odone finds research done on pigs that yields a missing component to her husband's research. - Scientific research operates within the confines of government. When the Odones come up with a therapy that works, they find that they can't offer it up to others without following FDA testing and approval laws. - Scientific research operates within the confines of funding. The Odones learn that scientific experimentation isn't cheap, and finding funding isn't easy because they had to find someone who believed in their discovery, and those who fund research are mainly interested in whether they will be able to mass produce the results for financial gain. Additionally, on the myelin project website you can download lessons to use in biology, including lab activities. Your students can also ask questions on the site, as well as get information as to what happened to Lorenzo after the movie was released the movie was released in 1992, but Lorenzo lived much longer. You can download and check out the lesson plans to see if this will work for you in your classroom. Lastly, there is no foul language or sex scenes, so you won't have administration and parents on your back.
V**L
Very worthwhile movie
I never watched this movie when it came out, because I read just a little bit about it and was certain that it would be a sappy tearjerker--my least favorite kind of movie. I finally watched it as an assignment for a college class and now realize how wrong I was. This is a great movie at so many levels--the acting, the true story, the inspiring determination of the parents, the study on obedience to authority in spite of harm to their own children of the parent support group the (not surprising) arrogance of the doctors. I googled an update on the status of this disease, and was stunned (but shouldn't have been) that many physicians resisted prescribing [hopefully not too terrible a spoiler alert] Lorenzo's Oil because they were (ironically) offended by the portrayal of physicians in this movie. Shame on them. Watch this movie and prepare to be amazed.
W**6
Lorenzo's Oil
This is some movie! Everyone who is interested in either their health and/or their family's health should see this "moving" picture. All the actors were just right for this unraveling of the truth about the practice and research of mainstream allopathic medicine. The business of medicine is not tuned in to the patient, they are tuned in to themselves, their credentials, their research and their "funding." This is the main reason why cures are far from the table in every disease mainstream medicine touches and gains control over. In the story is another truth, no matter how well meaning they start out to be! The Foundations that began with a good cause get all wrapped up in their "non-profit business" and their "vested interest." Then the Foundation settles down to the "business" of supporting orthodoxy. But then, when you think all is just about done, the film shows the heart and spirit of good men released (in part) from the control of the corporation and erucic acid is pulled drop by drop from rape seed oil for the completion of an effective formula to put adreno-leuko-dystrophy (ALD) at bay. Two individuals with unstoppable GRIT did it . . not the massive research community looking for treatments. The film shows that when there is a need, someone will rise to fill that need - and it is not usually a corporation. It is the common man and woman that does the research and finds the answer -- not the giant mechanism of the lazy, fattened, for-profit corporations who are more interested in "treatments" and "research" than cures. I have had a similar experience concerning lung cancer . . and cancer in general. I am now, 26 years later, giving my findings on cancer and several other "incurable" diseases in a website called CancerAndNutrition.info. Cancer is not the fearful disease it is cracked up to be by the allopathic diagnostic and treatment INDUSTRY!! Selah!
V**E
Good Movie.
Keto diet, true story, popular today with medical industry, Important to understand alternatives to healing.
K**A
Must watch
Good but sad movie
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