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After hospital negligence leaves her son profoundly brain-injured, a mother consumed by anger risks alienating him as she struggles to let go of the boy he might have been and accept the boy he has become.
And I find more interesting the mother son relationship. Different strokes.
And I find more interesting the mother son relationship. Different strokes.
See lessIn order to save his life, a grief-stricken mother must simultaneously rely upon and fight the medical system that caused her son's brain injury, all the while learning to let go of the boy he would have been and accept the boy he has become.
>>> a nice juicy piece of irony I love stories that tease out and build to an ironical denouement. It takes skill and insight to pull it off convincingly. But I don't suggest working it into the logline because you are, in effect, giving away the ending, the solution to the dramatic problem.
>>> a nice juicy piece of irony
I love stories that tease out and build to an ironical denouement. It takes skill and insight to pull it off convincingly.
But I don’t suggest working it into the logline because you are, in effect, giving away the ending, the solution to the dramatic problem.
See lessIn order to save his life, a grief-stricken mother must simultaneously rely upon and fight the medical system that caused her son's brain injury, all the while learning to let go of the boy he would have been and accept the boy he has become.
>>> a nice juicy piece of irony I love stories that tease out and build to an ironical denouement. It takes skill and insight to pull it off convincingly. But I don't suggest working it into the logline because you are, in effect, giving away the ending, the solution to the dramatic problem.
>>> a nice juicy piece of irony
I love stories that tease out and build to an ironical denouement. It takes skill and insight to pull it off convincingly.
But I don’t suggest working it into the logline because you are, in effect, giving away the ending, the solution to the dramatic problem.
See less