Julianne
Moore won an Academy Award for her heart-wrenching performance in "Still
Alice," in which she plays a linguistics professor with early-onset
Alzheimer's disease.
Much
has been written about her characterization of a woman struggling with the
disease. But there's another reason the performance hits home for millions of
Americans, whether they are grappling with Alzheimer's or not. The late Richard
Glatzer, who co-directed the film with Wash Westmoreland, named it: "Still
Alice ," he said, is actually a film about "the real unsung
heroes: caregivers."
As
the audience journeys with Alice and her family
from diagnosis to acceptance and adaptation, we watch her husband and three
children struggle to make sense of the changes in Alice . They each adjust in their own way,
testing and transforming elements of their relationships. And we see what
happens when care becomes -- or doesn't become -- a central feature of these
relationships.
The
changes in these relationships -- between husband and wife, and mother and
child -- yield some of the most provocative, brutal and poignant moments of the
film. The care giving relationship is never simple, but the "presence of
being" it requires always offers an opportunity for raw honesty and
transformation -- both for the individuals involved and the relationship
itself. And, in the film, family members grow to become a crucial, if
imperfect, circle of care.
This story is familiar to
more and more Americans, young and old. Like so many families, Alice 's did not have a plan to address such
an unexpected diagnosis and must scramble to create makeshift solutions while
navigating their own in-the-moment reactions.
Structure of the lead:
Who- Julianne Moore
When- not
given
What- won an Academy Award for her heart-wrenching
performance in "Still Alice," in which she plays a linguistics
professor with early-onset Alzheimer's disease.
Why- not given
Where- not given
How- not
given
Keywords:
1. linguistics
語言學
2. Alzheimer's
disease 阿茲海默症
3. diagnosis
診斷
4. poignant
憂愁
Julianne Moore gives one of her greatest performances playing a professor with early-onset Alzheimer’s disease.
回覆刪除