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Al Pacino Will Play The Role Of Jack Kevorkian

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  • Al Pacino Will Play The Role Of Jack Kevorkian

    AL PACINO WILL PLAY THE ROLE OF JACK KEVORKIAN
    Ruzan Khachatryan

    "Radiolur"
    08.07.2009 15:21

    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," ABC News reports.

    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.

    There is no clear answer whether what he has done is a murder or not.

    Doctors and lawyers have been in constant struggle. Some say helping
    an incurable patient commit suicide is a humanitarian impulse, while
    others view it as a crime.

    To put it in a medical language, it's called euthanasia, and became
    known to the public, at large, due to the scandals around Jack
    Kevorkian.

    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.

    In Armenia euthanasia is illegal. The law says that the doctor, who
    incites the patient to euthanasia or does it himself, will be called
    to account. The Armenian Church also stands agai nst euthanasia,
    saying that no one has the right to control the God-given life.

    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.

    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 unwilling to talk to ABCNews.com, but his longtime
    lawyer said the 81-year-old doctor was "enthused about helping with
    the film." "He thinks Al Pacino will be great," said Mayer Morganroth.

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