Showing posts with label Oliver Sacks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oliver Sacks. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2024

Brilliant Minds, on NBC

This season’s newest TV doctor, Dr. Oliver Wolf, is transparently modeled on Dr. Oliver Wolf Sacks, the late motorcycling-riding gay neurologist of Jewish descent. So far, the series has explored all those aspects of his personality, except his Jewish heritage. It is hard to figure why they overlooked that one, right? Regardless, creator-writer Michael Grassi wisely focuses on the doctor’s patient-centered approach and his issues with authority in Brilliant Minds, which premieres this Monday on NBC.

Once again, Dr. Wolf will lose his job, because he did the right thing. In pilot episode prologue, that means taking a dementia patient to his granddaughter’s wedding, hoping if he seats his patient behind a piano, his memory will briefly reawaken. It sort of works, but he gets fired anyway.

Wolf wants to revel in his depression, but his old college friend, psych department chair Dr. Carol Pierce guilt trips him into joining her on-staff at Bronx General. His first case there tantalizingly offers similarities with
Invasion of the Body-Snatchers, but, disappointingly, Dr. Wolfs identifies an earthly neurological explanation regarding Hannah Peters’ strange belief her children are not really her children.

Somehow, Wolf and Pierce get along, but he immediately clashes with Dr. Josh Nichols, a veteran during the “don’t-ask-don’t-tell” era, who is not privy to Wolf’s “face-blindness,” another similarity he shares with the real-life Sacks. Since he is reluctant to discuss his condition, Dr. Wolf’s new skulls-full-of-mush neurology interns, Drs. Kinney, Nash, Dang, and Markus just assume he is aloof and anti-social. Coincidentally, Dr. Markus has his own rare neurological challenge, which will be revealed in a few episodes.

The series credits Sacks’
The Man Who Mistook his Wife for a Hat and An Anthropologist on Mars as sources of “inspiration,” but only the second episode, “The Disembodied Woman,” about a woman losing her proprioception, or sense of body control and positioning, is faithfully drawn from one of Hat’s case-study essays. Although the third episode, “The Lost Biker,” shares some thematic similarities with Sacks’ “The Lost Mariner,” the circumstances of each patient’s new memory-forming issues are considerably different.

“The Blackout Bride” presents some of Dr. Wolf’s most extreme methods, when he takes MDMA to understand his patient’s perception of events, but rather awkwardly, it turns out to be laced with PCP. Notably, this episode also introduces an apparently unresponsive patient, impressively portrayed by Alex Ozerov-Meyer, whom Wolf struggles to reach over an as yet unresolved multiple-episode story-arc.

Arguably, “The Haunted Marine” might be the best of the first six episodes, thanks its compassionate handling of military themes and Joshua Echebiri’s sensitive but refreshingly restrained performance as neurologically-troubled veteran, Steve Hill. However, the teen characters and immature melodrama of “The Girl who Cried Pregnant” make it the comparatively weakest.

The kind of medical detective work and deductive diagnoses depicted in the series remain tried and true grist for medical drama. To a great degree, viewers can think of
Brilliant Minds as a House M.D., but without the pill-popping, excellent musical taste, and withering sarcasm.

Monday, March 30, 2020

ReelAbilities ‘20: Oliver Sacks—His Own Life


Oliver Sacks died in 2015, but watching a documentary profile at such times as these can only make us wonder of what he would have made of the age of the CCP-virus, a.k.a. COVID-19. The practice of social distancing probably would have pained him, but he would surely be doing his part as a medical doctor (thank you medical professionals and first responders). Sacks did not live long enough to witness the pandemic Xi-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed allowed to escape early detection in Wuhan to infect the world, but he had time to see his writings embraced by an initially skeptical medical community and to take stock of his life and career in Ric Burns’ Oliver Sacks: His Own Life, which “screens” as part of this year’s ReelAbilities Film Festival New York—now presented online.

Burns gives Sacks the full biographical treatment, tracing the psychological and emotional impact of his schizophrenic brother’s struggles during his formative years. His complicated relationship to his mother, who probably never really accepted Sacks’ sexuality, also features prominently. Although these issues clearly contributed to Sacks’ bouts with depression, they arguably helped make him such an unusually empathetic doctor.

Ironically, the book most responsible for Sacks’ fame, Awakenings, was initially a modest seller that made Sacks almost a pariah amongst the neurological establishment. His hide-bound peers simply refused to believe he had produced such dramatic results administering L-Dopa to patients in an apparent locked-in neurological state. They didn’t really change their mind until the Hollywood movie co-starring jazz legend Dexter Gordon was released.

Burns and Sacks’ colleagues do a nice job explaining how many of Sacks’ concepts and practices were so far ahead of his time. The study of what constitutes “consciousness” concerned Sacks long before Nobel Laureate Francis Crick started consulting him on the subject.