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Publisher: Journeyman
Length: 52mins
Location: USA
Copyright: ©Rebeccah Rush
Published: 13 Mar, 2009
Last Updated: 26 May, 2011
Ref: 4343
Length: 52mins
Location: USA
Copyright: ©Rebeccah Rush
Published: 13 Mar, 2009
Last Updated: 26 May, 2011
Ref: 4343
Diagnosed with ALS, a fatal neurodegenerative disease, film-maker Ben Byer starts documenting his life. What begins as a video diary grows into an epic and inspirational 3 year journey as Ben scours the globe looking for answers and a cure. A film of towering beauty and deep philosophical insight, Indestructible transcends its dark subject matter to deliver a universal message about the tragic joy of being alive.
‘I want to make a movie. That's my goal, man. Like, what's one of the twists of fate in your life that you would have just never imagined?’
A youthful Ben talks animatedly into the camera ten years before his diagnosis. In the bewildering early stages of his illness, Ben can’t hide his fear: ‘I’m having a hard time typing, my hands are not working…I could have any number of things.’ But when Ben receives the devastating diagnosis he is no less in the dark. ‘They have more treatment for the flu than they do for ALS’, he quips. The most doctors can do is monitor the gradual deterioration of all of his muscles. The only certainty: ‘patients do not live past six years’.
‘This is a hard disease to give advice about’ says one of the patients Ben reaches out to - ‘each person must find it for himself’. After hours of research he comes across ‘BuNaoGao’ a Chinese herbal medicine, which is ‘not a cure, but an oasis in the desert of ALS.’ Ben’s indomitable spirit is spurred when he notices a slight improvement and he heads to China to meet the creator of BuNaoGao. ‘My body is about 15% dead’ Ben says defiantly ‘but I’m also 85% alive.’
Eastern medicine might have the answer. ‘Everyone I’ve talked to with ALS in America, they’re not doing too well, they’re in wheelchairs’ says Todd, a fellow sufferer living in China. Then Ben stumbles across a controversial foetal cell surgery, believed to allow ALS sufferers to run again.
‘It will get you a new life’ says Danny Vyvey. Before the operation he couldn’t take a shower on his own. Ben goes ahead with the surgery and his father begins scheduling many ALS patients for Dr Huang. But the surgery doesn’t work. Dr Huang comes under increasing criticism from the Western medical establishment and Ben’s options have run out.
‘Probably the thought [of suicide] runs through my head once a day’ Ben admits. Yet through the twin passions of his son and his film, Ben somehow comes close to that purpose driving us all: ‘I wish I was a good enough artist to make this movie without having the disease’ he grins through tears. By turns amusing and tragic, Indestructible is one of the most intimate and powerful films you’ll see on a degenerative illness.
‘I want to make a movie. That's my goal, man. Like, what's one of the twists of fate in your life that you would have just never imagined?’
A youthful Ben talks animatedly into the camera ten years before his diagnosis. In the bewildering early stages of his illness, Ben can’t hide his fear: ‘I’m having a hard time typing, my hands are not working…I could have any number of things.’ But when Ben receives the devastating diagnosis he is no less in the dark. ‘They have more treatment for the flu than they do for ALS’, he quips. The most doctors can do is monitor the gradual deterioration of all of his muscles. The only certainty: ‘patients do not live past six years’.
‘This is a hard disease to give advice about’ says one of the patients Ben reaches out to - ‘each person must find it for himself’. After hours of research he comes across ‘BuNaoGao’ a Chinese herbal medicine, which is ‘not a cure, but an oasis in the desert of ALS.’ Ben’s indomitable spirit is spurred when he notices a slight improvement and he heads to China to meet the creator of BuNaoGao. ‘My body is about 15% dead’ Ben says defiantly ‘but I’m also 85% alive.’
Eastern medicine might have the answer. ‘Everyone I’ve talked to with ALS in America, they’re not doing too well, they’re in wheelchairs’ says Todd, a fellow sufferer living in China. Then Ben stumbles across a controversial foetal cell surgery, believed to allow ALS sufferers to run again.
‘It will get you a new life’ says Danny Vyvey. Before the operation he couldn’t take a shower on his own. Ben goes ahead with the surgery and his father begins scheduling many ALS patients for Dr Huang. But the surgery doesn’t work. Dr Huang comes under increasing criticism from the Western medical establishment and Ben’s options have run out.
‘Probably the thought [of suicide] runs through my head once a day’ Ben admits. Yet through the twin passions of his son and his film, Ben somehow comes close to that purpose driving us all: ‘I wish I was a good enough artist to make this movie without having the disease’ he grins through tears. By turns amusing and tragic, Indestructible is one of the most intimate and powerful films you’ll see on a degenerative illness.
Comments
Beautifull movie,beautifull people,what more to say!
Posted: Aug 09 2009, 00:58 Report AbuseThe documentary is inspiring and surprisingly well made for someone who 'doesn't have talent', but I don't believe that it deserve the award received.
Posted: Jan 09 2010, 09:05 Report AbuseTitle "Indestructible" can make one believe that something extraordinary will happen in this movie, that the person would pull through and at least beat the 6 year mark... alas....
Some of the other characters in the documentary showed incredible amounts of inner strength and resolve to beat the disease as much as Ben if not more, guess the title should have been "indestructibleS"
Comment removed by poster.
Posted: Feb 16 2010, 16:02 Report Abusei have only seen the trailer to this, but even that 7 minutes was riveting footage. since seeing another documentary a few years ago, " so much, so fast " showing the life of an incredible young man's fight with ALS, i have tried to keep up with the disease and what is being done to cure it. my only complaint is how hard it is to see these wonderful documentaries. more people would watch them if they woukd be carried by netfkix, redbox, etc. stories of human life and how hard a family will fight for a loved one, is the best story ever to be told.
Posted: Mar 25 2012, 22:15 Report Abuse