"I Finally Watched the Movie Still Alice. Now The World Needs A Sequel To Reverse Alice's Alzheimer's!"
A movie sequel to Still Alice would spread knowledge that Alzheimer's Has Been Reversed out to the world faster than any amount of blogs, websites, or conferences! 5.7 million people in the US have Alzheimer's and 40 million worldwide.
During my father's long agonizing Alzheimer's illness, I purposefully did not delve into the what-ifs of the future. I didn't look online to learn about the progression of memory loss, and I didn't question if anything could be done. I assumed that his doctor knew best and there was no hope for recovery. I didn't want to think about tomorrows. So when the movie Still Alice came out when he was ill, I refused to see it. I was afraid of the cruel reality of what my father may become.
Two years after my father's death, I decided that my research into the prevention and reversal of Alzheimer's needed to be shared. I talked to endless people, and it was rare to find a person that was aware of Dr. Bredesen's unprecedented reversal of Alzheimer's. The word of a treatment for Alzheimer's was emerging so slow, that millions would die without even knowing that they had an option to halt their horrific decline. So I made a decision — I would attempt to assist in spreading the word.
It was and still is, my hope that Dr. Bredesen's work will be honored with a Nobel Prize. The world would then have to listen to someone, other than the pharmaceuticals, for the key to Alzheimer's survival.
If Alice, played by Julianne Moore, was still alive at the end of the movie, there could be a sequel. Alice's husband John, played by Alec Baldwin, could attend one of Dr. Bredesen's lectures and utilize ReCode to get his wife back!
Sure enough, Alice was alive! Withdrawn and placid, but she was alive and living at home with her daughter. Then her husband, John, left New York to go to work at the Mayo Clinic. Perfect — the ending was perfect.
A movie sequel to Still Alice would get the word of Alzheimer's reversal out to the world faster than years of blogs, websites, and conferences!
A sequel would easily slip into the previous events of the first Still Alice. Alice's husband would be in a position to hear of Dr. Bredesen's 40 years of research and his discovery of the end of Alzheimer's. Alice would go through ReCode and demonstrate the ins and outs of what is needed for her personalized protocol. Then her daughter that had the Alzheimer's gene, would get on the program to prevent future memory loss.
During my search into finding the right person to reach out to, I discovered some tragic information. The directors, Wash Westmoreland and Richard Glatzer, were chosen by Lex Lutzus and James Brown for the film. However, Richard Glatzer had just been diagnosed with ALS. I can't even imagine how Richard endured making a movie about Alzheimer's while facing his tragic news.
In spite of Richard's untimely diagnosis, his contribution to Still Alice was rewarded with a movie that raised the level of empathy for anyone faced with a devastating diagnosis of Alzheimer's.
If I can reach the heart of Wash or Lisa, I know they would find a way to create a breakthrough sequel that will tell the world — ALZHEIMER'S AND ALS HAS BEEN REVERSED!
Read article about Wash and Richard →Making an impact on the world will need movie makers that will stand up to the forces of the pharmaceuticals and other organizations and bring moviegoers the acceptance of the functional medicine movement.
Click on the video below to check out the trailer for this great movie. Then imagine if there was a sequel that allows Alice to reverse her memory loss with Dr. Bredesen's ReCode Protocol. The movie can be equally meaningful by allowing the daughter to use ReCode to optimize her biomarkers to prevent her own future possibility of Alzheimer's.
"It's cruel that so many people with Alzheimer's do not know that others, with the same fate, have reversed their memory loss." — Cheryl Brittingham, M.Ed.