logo
VidMate
Free YouTube video & music downloader
Download
My Beautiful Broken Brain (2014)

My Beautiful Broken Brain (2014)

GENRESDocumentary,Biography
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
David LynchSophie RobinsonHente SodderlandJan Sodderland
DIRECTOR
Sophie Robinson,Lotje Sodderland

SYNOPSICS

My Beautiful Broken Brain (2014) is a English movie. Sophie Robinson,Lotje Sodderland has directed this movie. David Lynch,Sophie Robinson,Hente Sodderland,Jan Sodderland are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2014. My Beautiful Broken Brain (2014) is considered one of the best Documentary,Biography movie in India and around the world.

MY BEAUTIFUL BROKEN BRAIN is 34 year old Lotje Sodderland's personal voyage into the complexity, fragility and wonder of her own brain following a life changing hemorrhagic stroke. Regaining consciousness to an alien world - Lotje was thrown into a new existence of distorted reality where words held no meaning and where her sensory perception had changed beyond recognition. This a story of pioneering scientific research to see if her brain might recover - with outcomes that no one could have predicted. It is a film about hope, transformation and the limitless power of the human mind.

More

My Beautiful Broken Brain (2014) Reviews

  • Living life with our beautiful broken brains.

    mynamemcgregor-12016-03-27

    As a survivor of multiple strokes including a major hemorrhagic stroke in 1999 just 13 days after my 37th Birthday and a massive hemorrhagic stroke 2011 just before Christmas I can relate to the lady in this film, I went through and I am still going through a lot of what she had experienced from her stroke. I found this movie very good at explaining what we as stroke survivors are going through. I would highly recommend this movie to people who are interested stroke experiences and want to understand what we are going through because it is truly hard for us to explain to others what it is like to live life with our beautiful broken brains.

    More
  • Highly recommended.

    thebigzip2016-04-05

    This film is an amazing and positive glimpse into the area of brain dysfunction. Although it is specific to a stroke, I found the symptoms very similar to those I suffered with Lyme and a separate incident of oxygen loss. I recommend it to anyone who knows someone with Alzheimers, Lyme, stroke or any brain disabling illness. The subject of the film is young, intelligent, beautiful and most importantly positive as she struggles to find her way through the situation she's in, pockmarked with the fear and loss of herself and her future from her disability. It's her positive traits and the telling of this as a human story, not a medical document that makes this a revealing glimpse into this world.

    More
  • Painfully Accurate

    tenafterdave2016-04-02

    It seems people who have had experience with strokes or other brain injuries are the first to be weighing in about this film. I thought it was an excellent, commendably honest look at the confusion and frustration which are common components of the injured brain. (In my case, I experienced a fractured skull with subdural hematoma when I was just entering my teen years. It took a full year of therapy for me to fully recover.) I was spared aphasia, yet I experienced hemi-paralysis and remember vividly the cognitive distortions and unreal-seeming surprises that occurred, much as they to do the brave Lotje in the film. All in all, I thought this was an outstanding film, and wish nothing but the very best for the brave young lady who documented her experience.

    More
  • Beautiful documentary about the reality of brain dysfunction

    angel-youles2016-07-14

    One of the things that struck me most about this documentary is how the filmmakers capture and recreate the experiences after Lotje Sodderland's hemorrhagic stroke and make it real and comprehensible for those who wouldn't understand how it feels for Lotje and others who suffer from this. The usage of colour and amplification of sounds help the audience to not only understand what it is like for her but to also be able to hear and see it. I imagine that was her goal for making this documentary, to share her story and feel less isolated in it all and it truly pulls at your heart strings. She said it was also a way of making sense of it all for herself too in the documentary. The documentary is very real and deeply meaningful in many ways... you go on the journey with Lotje, and you feel very much for her. You watch her go from not being able to talk very much, go through therapy and experiments, to speaking about her experiences and accepting her new reality. The admirable thing is that she never gave up fighting and hope. She got better through doing so and it is a clear and beautiful message that this documentary gets across. No matter how bad it is, you should never give up hope... Lotje even found love with that beautiful broken brain of hers! It also provokes the question of reality and how brain plays a major part in constructing it. Lotje experiences a new reality, enriched with colour from the right eye and deeper field of vision, she experiences light and sound differently and she comes to accept that reality she has and is still very thankful about life and her journey is inspiring! The medium of film is beautiful to me because of this... so many stories and experiences are shared and can be understood and recreated through film. If you are a lover of documentary, science or life, I'd highly recommend this documentary.

    More
  • Amazing Person; Mediocre Documentary

    leila_sami2018-10-04

    I'll start by saying that I absolutely love documentaries of any kind and on any subject and these are predominantly what I'll choose to watch. The subject of this documentary, Lotje, is clearly a beautiful human inside and out and her strength in the face of such a harrowing and life-changing event is incredible. I know I couldn't cope with all the challenges she faced with such dignity and grace. When I saw her lecturing and speaking French I just couldn't believe her progress, which was all achieved from her own positivity, strength and hard work. That being said, for some reason, I found that my mind kept wandering to other things things. I'm not sure if it's the editing as another reviewer mentioned or just that the documentary was probably longer than the content warranted or perhaps it was the reviews I read and the high expectations they created. Sadly sometimes an interesting person/subject doesn't necessarily make for an interesting documentary.

    More

Hot Search