Current:Home > ScamsSurpassing Quant Think Tank Center|Parkinson's 'made me present in every moment of my life,' says Michael J. Fox -Capitatum
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center|Parkinson's 'made me present in every moment of my life,' says Michael J. Fox
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-06 08:58:35
What really got to me was the walk.
Early in the film Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie,Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center we see the Emmy, Golden Globe and Grammy award-winning performer trying to walk down a city street. Even as his equilibrium is severely distorted by the effects of Parkinson's disease, Fox energetically launches himself into the task — moving forward with a lurching gait that seems as if he might spin off into an unpredictable direction at any moment.
Behind him, an aide who is also a movement coach gently reminds him to slow down and reset himself before every step. An admirer — a woman in a face mask — walks by and says hi; as Fox turns to acknowledge her, he gets caught in his own legs and falls down.
As the aide helps him get up and the admirer asks if he's all right, Fox drops the punchline: "You knocked me off my feet."
That's the kind of intimate drama which knits together the best moments in Still, a portrait of a talented and widely-admired performer who keeps fighting, even as Parkinson's slowly takes away many of the things he values most.
At times it is a showy film, knitting together re-enacted footage and clips from Fox's wide body of TV and movie work to recreate key moments in the actor's life. It begins with the instant in 1990 when Fox realized he had a tremor in his pinkie finger he couldn't control.
In that scene, director Davis Guggenheim (an Oscar winner for An Inconvenient Truth) melds footage of a body double in a hotel bed who's grabbing his own hand with clips from fight scenes in other Fox films to build a montage showing the feelings flooding the actor as he watched this digit which seemingly had a mind of its own.
Despite the fact that he was one of Hollywood's hottest actors at the time, "I was in an acid bath of fear and professional insecurity," Fox says in voice over. "The trembling was a message from the future."
Telling a painful truth without pity
Still accomplishes something amazing – it draws viewers into the painful reality of Fox's life with Parkinson's without turning him into an object of pity or martyrdom.
We get the requisite Hollywood star biography: born and raised in Canada, Fox left high school and moved to Los Angles as a teen to pursue acting. Because he looked young for his age, he could credibly play 12-year-olds and landed in a range of mediocre TV shows for low pay. Just as he was about to throw in the towel and head back north, he scored the role that would launch his career – young conservative Alex P. Keaton in the popular NBC sitcom Family Ties.
Here, Guggenheim works his magic again, using behind-the-scenes clips from Family Ties and Back to the Future for an arresting sequence dramatizing how Fox filmed both projects at once in 1985 – putting himself on a treadmill of constant work. It wasn't until his agent congratulated him on the success of Back to the Future that he realized the film was any good.
But that showbusiness stuff is just the backdrop setting up the film's most affecting moments. When Fox faces the camera and speaks directly about his life — connecting with viewers through the camera as if he's speaking directly and solely to each one of us — the film really takes flight.
We see him work with a speech therapist to narrate audio from his books – he's written four, including 2002's Lucky Man: A Memoir. We watch him describe how a fall led him to break several bones in his face. We observe his struggle to put toothpaste on a toothbrush and learn he tried to hide his advancing Parkinson's symptoms while working on films and appearing on TV talk shows in the 1990s — as Guggenheim serves up footage of Fox favoring his left hand in different scenes.
And Fox is honest about how he coped by plunging into work and struggling to stay sober, as wife Tracy Pollan tried to keep him honest about his issues. "My first two years of sobriety [were] like a knife fight in a closet," he says in the film. "I wasn't facing things."
Revealing insecurities without submitting to them
What emerges is a portrait of a man strong enough to reveal his insecurities, and tough enough to fight through them. He declares his intention to avoid pity and live as independently as he can, while remaining realistic about how much more difficult things are becoming with each advancing year.
But even after acknowledging all that Parkinson's has taken from him, Fox admits it has given him something, too.
"The thing about motion with me is I've always been moving...I've always counted on movement to not only propel me from place to place, but to express myself," he says, deep into the film.
"The thing that I learned was that I couldn't be still in my life. I couldn't be present in my life. Until I found this thing that made me present in every moment of my life. It's shaken me awake."
Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie is available on Apple TV+ and select theaters nationwide.
veryGood! (736)
Related
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Inspectors are supposed to visit all farmworker housing to ensure its safety, but some used FaceTime
- Man shot after fights break out at Washington Square Park
- 6 people killed in Wisconsin house fire
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Groups oppose veto of bill to limit governor’s power to cut off electronic media in emergencies
- Klay Thompson is leaving the Warriors and will join the Mavericks, AP sources say
- 'The Bear' is back ... and so is our thirst for Jeremy Allen White. Should we tone it down?
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- House Republicans sue Attorney General Garland over access to Biden special counsel interview audio
Ranking
- 'Most Whopper
- No. 3 seed Aryna Sabalenka withdraws from Wimbledon with shoulder injury
- TV personality Carlos Watson testifies in his trial over collapse of startup Ozy Media
- Under the Boardwalk officials vow to address homelessness in Atlantic City
- Average rate on 30
- Beryl strengthens into a Category 1 hurricane in the Atlantic as it bears down on Caribbean
- Gaza aid pier dismantled again due to weather, reinstallation date unknown
- At 28, Bardella could become youngest French prime minister at helm of far-right National Rally
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Groups oppose veto of bill to limit governor’s power to cut off electronic media in emergencies
Chipotle preps for Olympics by offering meals of star athletes, gold foil-wrapped burritos
How Erin Andrews' Cancer and Fertility Journey Changed Her Relationship With Husband Jarret Stoll
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
Lawsuit accuses Iran, Syria and North Korea of providing support for Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on Israel
'Inside Out 2' becomes first movie of 2024 to cross $1B mark
All-Star Paul George set to join 76ers on a $212 million free-agent deal, AP source says