Movies
reprint or license print story Print email this story to a friend E-Mail

tool name

close
tool goes here
Comments (0) |

'Extraordinary Measures': Director takes no risks to save movie

By Roger Moore The Orlando Sentinel

For its big-screen debut, start-up studio CBS Films delivers what might, in an earlier age, have been a "disease of the week" TV movie. Extraordinary Measures is a sometimes moving, solid if unsurprising account of a father's tireless efforts to use his business acumen to develop a cure for his children's fatal genetic disorder.

Brendan Fraser plays John Crowley, an on-the-rise marketing executive who comes home to a loving wife (Keri Russell) and two adoring children. But the kids, younger than 9, are in wheelchairs. They have Pompe disease, a disorder that is certain to kill them before their 10th birthdays.

Doctors just want the Crowleys to comfort their kids, because nothing can be done. But John isn't ready to watch them die. He does his homework, reaches out to any and all who are working on the disorder. That's how he tracks down Dr. Robert Stonehill. Harrison Ford plays Stonehill as a curmudgeon, holed up in his Nebraska lab, dodging phone calls and callously ignoring the human side to his research.

"This is a theory, not a therapy," he growls to Crowley, when John, frantic over the latest hospitalization, finally reaches Stonehill. So John cuts to the chase. How much to develop, test and take a drug to market?

Egos clash as John quits his job and gambles on raising money and starting a bio-tech company. The script slips into tedium as we see the proud, pigheaded scientist's ways of nearly derailing the operation, repeatedly, and the father's willingness to mortgage his and Stonehill's future to save the kids.

But director Tom Vaughan (What Happens in Vegas) finds plenty of heart in Robert Nelson Jacobs' script, based on a true story. When scientists and businessmen forget who this is all about, Crowley brings in children in wheelchairs. Fraser is well cast as an emotional guy who manipulates emotions (as does the film) to win arguments. He holds his own in most scenes with Ford, who also was on-the-nose casting.

The movie's biggest shortcoming is its lack of surprise. When you cast David Clennon, famed for his icy thirtysomething business titan, as an icy business titan, you're not taking risks. As studio debuts go, Extraordinary Measures isn't extraordinary. It's simply safe.

Comments

The Herald-Leader allows readers to comment on stories; the views expressed here are not those of the Herald-Leader or its staff. Readers must avoid personal attacks and libelous or inappropriate remarks, and users who violate our commenting policies can be banned from the site. See our commenting policy here. Some comments may be reprinted in the newspaper. Registered user names are posted with comments.

RSS Feed
  Add to My Yahoo!
Find a Job
Keywords:
Location:
SEARCH FOR MOVIE TIMES

• All movies A-Z
• What's playing at the theaters
• Top 10 & What's out this week

By keyword  

By genre 

Find love today
I am a
looking for a
between and
zip/postal code

Powered by Match.com

Send Us Feedback

LexGo.com is a work in a progress, so you'll see the site growing and evolving over time. If you have ideas, suggestions, complaints or questions, or if you just want to share the love, shoot me an e-mail at sshive@herald-leader.com.