Unrest *** / *****
Directed
by: Jennifer
Brea.
Written
by: Jennifer
Brea & Kim Roberts.
Imagine being so sick that you
cannot get out of bed for days at a time. When you try to, you are in immense
pain, and often collapse to the ground. Having this go one day in, day out for
years – with occasions where everything seems fine, only to be thrust right
back into the depths of pain, and an inability to move again. Then imagine that
many people – doctors, those in the media, friends, family, etc. – think that
you’re making the whole thing up. It’s all in your head, they say, or call you
lazy. That is what people who suffer from chronic fatigue go through all the
time. It’s a real disease, and yet because doctors cannot isolate its cause,
cannot see anything physically wrong with you when they run all the tests they
can, many assume it’s psychosomatic. That just makes it all worse.
Unrest is a documentary about
chronic fatigue, made by Jennifer Brea, who has been suffering with the disease
for a few years now. Once, she was active and outgoing – she married her
college sweetheart, as they both pursued their Ph.D.’s. Life was seemingly
perfect – and then, this happened, and nothing was the same. Brea is lucky
among people with this disease – her husband is supportive (and apparently,
they have money). Others aren’t as lucky. Brea films herself – and then films
others who have the same thing, and let them tell their stories. They’re all
different, but none of them are good. Some people have lost marriages over this
– their spouses think they’re making it up when they go to one doctor after
another, and cannot find anything. In some countries – like Denmark – they
treat it as a severe mental illness, and actually institutionalize those with
severe cases against their will.
As a movie, Unrest is fairly
mediocre. It’s interesting, sure, and does provide a lot of information about
an illness that people do not understand, that disproportionally effects women,
and is hardly being studied. And yet, the film is also rather repetitive, and
after the first half hour or so, I’m not sure how much more we really learn
about it. It is certainly an advocacy doc – one of them meant to help raise
awareness, and get people involved – and on that level, it does what it sets
out to do. It wish it was a deeper, more ambitious film – but you cannot deny
that it shines a light on an important subject, and does so with intelligence.
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