This is topic Alec Baldwin Gets Lyme Disease in forum General Support at LymeNet Flash.


To visit this topic, use this URL:
https://flash.lymenet.org/ubb/ultimatebb.php/topic/3/21250

Posted by johnnylight (Member # 18518) on :
 
Alec Baldwin agrees with us and is going to produce and star in the movie, Lymelife, about what happens when deer ticks go bad.


http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Alec-Baldwin-Gets-Lyme-Disease-8052.html

Johnny
 
Posted by Need Lots of Help (Member # 18603) on :
 
I can't find it, but that is GREAT!!!
 
Posted by Tracy9 (Member # 7521) on :
 
I saw this when it came out almost a year ago, it was posted all over Lymenet....but is there any new info on it?
 
Posted by radfaraf (Member # 11909) on :
 
April, 2009 release date according to:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1192426/
 
Posted by bettyg (Member # 6147) on :
 
using radfa...'s link; found this:

SPOILER !!
-**********


This synopsis contains spoilers

See plot summary for non-spoiler summarized description. Visit our Synopsis Help to learn more

SynopsisEditHistoryDiscuss


Set in late-70s Long Island, Lymelife follows two families who crumble when tangled relationships, real estate problems and Lyme disease converge in the heart of suburbia.


Fifteen-year-old Scott Bartlett is a gentle boy, radically different from his blustery father Mickey and tightly wired mother Brenda.


An outbreak of Lyme disease, as well as the accompanying paranoia, hits their suburban community hard.

When the Bartletts' neighbour Charlie Bragg is diagnosed with the illness, Brenda calms her fears by duct-taping Scott's cuffs shut.


Despite the onset of this mysterious ailment, the two families are quite busy.

Since Charlie is unable to work, his wife Melissa must keep the income flowing herself.

She is hired by Mickey, who is the developer of an enormous subdivision, and though this gesture is a friendly favour, it is also patently motivated by lust.


Mickey's history of philandering is one of the many things upsetting his wife Brenda, who yearns for the comfort of their old neighbourhood in Queens.


And growing up amid this marital cocktail is Scott, who has been in love with the Braggs' daughter Adrianna for all of his young life. The news both good and bad is that she is starting to return his interest.


Things really heat up when Jimmy, Scott's older brother, comes home on leave from the army.

Jimmy shares many of his father's personality traits, and his confrontations with Mickey trigger events that permanently alter both families.

Page last updated by TheSilverRaider, 4 months ago
 
Posted by ldfighter (Member # 9405) on :
 
Here's what the co-writer/director had to say about Lyme disease in an interview:

"Q: You mentioned at the Q&A after the screening today you knew someone that had Lyme disease and how it degenerated. Could you say who that was?"

"Derick: That was a person during our childhood that was a friend of the family. He was misdiagnosed with Lyme disease, and they were giving him the wrong medicine. It just deteriorated to the point where he was never himself, and he is still not himself. I've done a lot of research about Lyme disease while writing the script and beforehand. If you don't catch it right away, and if you don't actually treat it with the correct medication - which is heavy doses of penicillin - it erodes your brain. Aside from the aches, arthritis that it gives you, the rashes and things like that, it actually acts much like syphilis does where your brain just starts to erode."

http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Sundance-Interview-Rory-Culkin-And-Derick-Martini-11600.html
 
Posted by Lymetoo (Member # 743) on :
 
Penicillin? Sheesh!

The synopsis bettyg posted doesn't sound too promising to me.
 
Posted by ldfighter (Member # 9405) on :
 
I'm not sure what to expect from the film but I'd cut the director a little slack on this comment, he probably just meant antibiotics. It was a film festival, he's getting asked all sorts of questions. It's not like this is a Lyme documentary.

Meanwhile understanding it can hit the brain like syphilis would be new to popular culture I think.
 


Powered by UBB.classic™ 6.7.3