Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

HBO Film Inflames Dr. Death's Critics

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • HBO Film Inflames Dr. Death's Critics

    HBO Film Inflames Dr. Death's Critics

    Al Pacino to Star in Film That Critics Say Makes Dr. Kevorikian a
    'Heroic Martyr'

    ABCNews.com
    July 6, 2009

    By SUSAN DONALDSON JAMES

    Al Pacino will play the role of Jack Kevorkian, the enigmatic
    pathologist known as "Dr. Death" and "Jack the Dripper," who assisted
    in more than 130 suicides with his "mercy machine."

    The flamboyant doctor, who served eight years in prison on a
    second-degree murder charge, was released from a Michigan maximum
    security prison in 2007 with a parole pledge that he never kill again.

    The made-for-television movie, "You Don't Know Jack," directed by
    Barry Levinson ("Rain Main") with a script by Adam Maser ("Breach"),
    won't air on HBO until the spring of 2010.

    But the project -- five years in the making -- is already inflaming
    leaders in the assisted death community, which for decades has eyed
    Kevorkian with suspicion and disdain.

    They say the doctor was "death obsessed," and his bizarre antics set
    back the right-to-die movement.

    "I am worried that they are going to do the Hollywood take on
    Kevorkian and turn him into a heroic martyr," said Arthur Caplan,
    director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of
    Pennsylvania. "The temptation is there -- when you see Al Pacino in
    the role portraying him as the little guy fighting the system, helping
    people who are miserable and otherwise would be left to die."

    Kevorkian was unwilling to talk to ABCNews.com, but his longtime
    lawyer said the 81-year-old doctor was "enthused about helping with
    the film."

    Kevorkian lives in Royal Oaks, Mich., and is writing a book. His
    artwork is on permanent display in an Armenian museum in Boston.

    "He thinks Al Pacino will be great," said Mayer Morganroth, who may be
    played by Dustin Hoffman or Richard Dreyfuss. "I think it will be
    realistic. It won't be scathing and critical."

    Caplan and others who support assisted dying with strict guidelines
    have said Kevorkian was "cavalier and insensitive" to the dying who
    turned to him.

    They also ha
    ho, with further evaluation, could have been helped.

    Caplan said he once asked Kevorkian if he had been aware that one of
    his victims had a long history of depression. The doctor reputedly
    responded, "How am I supposed to know the details of her life?"

    Assisted Suicide Began in 1930s

    Kevorkian became the face of the assisted suicide movement, which had
    its roots in the United States in the 1930s and gathered steam in the
    1990s.
    Today, Oregon, Washington and Montana are the only states that allow
    terminally ill patients to ask a doctor for a lethal amount of
    medication after a medical and psychological evaluation. Those states
    rejected Kevorkian's call for "death on demand."

    "Strangely, one of the legacies of Kevorkian is that he made clear the
    kinds of protections that have to be put in place," said Caplan.

    Kevorkian, whose tactics have included fasting, appearing at a trial
    in Puritan-era stocks and protesting in a ball and chain, was seen as
    "an odd duck," according to Caplan.

    "But he brought a lot of relish and enthusiasm to his work," Caplan
    added.

    The doctor's mantra was "dying is not a crime," and he made national
    headlines with his invention -- the thanatron, Greek for suicide
    machine -- which gave patients a "dignified, humane and painless"
    death.

    "The patient can do it in the comfort of their own home any time they
    want," said Kevorkian at the time.

    A pull of the trigger released a drug to induce a deep coma. Once
    asleep, a timer would inject a lethal dose of potassium chloride to
    stop the heart.

    Later, he used a "mercitron," or mercy machine, after his medical
    license was revoked after the first two deaths and he could no longer
    get the substances required for the thanatron.

    The film's producer, Steve Jones, who is also making a documentary of
    Kevorkian's failed 2008 bid for Congress, said the HBO project is not
    about euthanasia but "a look at a passionate man who spent his entire
    life fighting for rights he believes that every human should have."

    Kevorkian was born in
    eft Armenia after the genocide of 1915. He was trained as a
    pathologist and first got his name, Dr. Death, because of a 1956 paper
    he wrote about photographing the eyes of dying patients.

    He was dismissed from his residency at the University of Michigan for
    advocating experimentation on consenting convicts during
    execution. Other medical projects included experiments on transfusing
    blood from cadavers into living patients.

    Death-Themed Art Freaked Out Colleagues

    Kevorkian also created music and art with ghoulish themes. Those who
    worked closely with him said he "freaked them out," according to
    Caplan.

    By 1987, Kervorkian began advertising in newspapers as a "physician
    consultant" for "death counseling," and in 1989 he built his suicide
    machine on his kitchen table.

    The first assisted death was that of Janet Adkins, a 54 year old from
    Oregon with Alzheimer's disease. It took place in Kervorkian's parked
    Volkswagen van.

    By the 1990s, Kevorkian was charged and acquitted in numerous other
    assisted deaths, and his medical license was revoked. By 1992,
    Michigan passed a ban on the procedure.

    In one contentious case, he helped Hugh Gale, a 70-year-old with
    emphysema and congestive heart disease, to die, but investigators
    reportedly found papers that showed Kevorkian altered the account of
    the death, deleting Gale's request to halt the procedure.

    But it was a 1998 episode of CBS's "60 Minutes," showing Kevorkian
    giving a lethal injection to Thomas Youk, 52, who suffered from Lou
    Gehrig's disease, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, that led to
    Kevorkian's conviction on second degree murder charges.

    "He was a complex man, the smartest man I ever met," said Geoffrey
    Fieger, the lawyer who got Kevorkian acquitted eight times.

    Film Is 'Tour de Force'

    Fieger was also a consultant on the HBO film and called it "a
    masterpiece and a tour de force."

    "We had a love-hate relationship," said Fieger. "It was a father-son
    relationship -- me being the father and he being the son. I was up
    against the govern
    problem was Jack Kevorkian. He was headstrong."

    Even Hemlock Society founder Derek Humphry, now 79 and the
    self-described "grand old man" of the assisted death movement, said
    Kevorkian's methods were "too perilous and risky."

    Humphry wrote "Last Exit," a how-to guide for people wishing to end
    their lives, after helping his terminally ill wife, Jean, end her life
    with an overdose of medication. In 1989, when Kevorkian was still
    practicing medicine in Los Angeles, he and Humphry "quarreled right on
    the spot."

    "He came to me hoping that I, as head of Hemlock, would send him the
    patients," Humphry told ABCNews.com. "I said, 'No,' I don't believe
    there should be a clinic for assisted suicide. It should be done at
    home or in a hospital."

    "He stormed out of the room and has never spoken to me since," Humphry
    said.

    Kevorkian Had Big Ego

    After that, Kevorkian reportedly opposed Humphry's approach, saying
    assisted suicides should be done in a medical setting.

    "People are aware of euthanasia because of him," he said. "But I think
    he ruined it in the eyes of the medical profession."

    "I credit him and criticize him," said Humphry. "The American public
    and the media gave him so much attention. He had lot of ego. He was
    not a team player at all."

    But Kevorkian's lawyer said the HBO movie will reveal that the public
    face of Dr. Death "is not him at all."

    "Jack is a very private guy," said Morganroth. "He never charged
    anyone for his services, he lives off very little and he was never
    interested in dollars. He's somewhat of a loner."

    The enigmatic doctor has been parodied in numerous television and
    movie scripts: In an episode of the "Simpsons," a depressed grandpa
    considers the "diepod."

    In the pilot of "Grey's Anatomy," Meredith says, "If I hadn't taken
    the Hippocratic oath, I would Kevorkian her with my bare hands."

    But both friends and enemies can see why powerhouse actor Al Pacino
    might relish the role of Dr. Death.

    "He reminds me of John Brown, who invaded Harper's Ferry in the Civil
    W
    ly nuts. He inspired attention to slavery and abolition, but he was
    completely wacky."


    http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment /MindMoodNews/story?id=7989806&page=1
Working...
X