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Do You Remember Love

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Do You Remember Love

Barbara Wyatt-Hollis is an English professor who begins to experience the effects of Alzheimer's. The film documents her decline and the emotional turmoil it causes for her. It also shows how the changes impact her husband, George, and their children. The film also looks at the process by which families can be educated and supported to deal with the impact of the disease, as well as what is done for those afflicted.

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Release : 1985
Rating : 7.3
Studio :
Crew : Set Dresser,  Best Boy Grip, 
Cast : Joanne Woodward Richard Kiley Geraldine Fitzgerald Jim Metzler Jordan Charney
Genre : Drama TV Movie

Cast List

Reviews

Mjeteconer
2018/08/30

Just perfect...

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Acensbart
2018/08/30

Excellent but underrated film

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MoPoshy
2018/08/30

Absolutely brilliant

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Odelecol
2018/08/30

Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.

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rpenland08
2011/06/23

This movie was released by Hallmark, in T.V. format nearly 1 year after we learned that my father had contracted Alzheimer's Disease.Naturally, we were searching for any and all information we could find to help my father, and the family, deal with this devastating disease. As I watched, I was Amazed at the similarities between the behavior of the main character of this movie (played by Ms Woodward) and my father's own behavior at the time. It was like I was watching my own father on television.As the movie progressed, I came to the realization that my father had contracted a disease that would eventually take his life. For the next few years, as we watched this disease consume him, the movie would flash back anew in my mind and helped to guide me through this. My father finally succumbed to the disease 19 days after his birthday in 1992, 8 years after we first learned he had it. By the time he did, like in the movie, he had forgotten his family. I went to see him 3 days before his death. He had no idea who I was but he held my two year old son in his lap and played with him like a child himself. I was 800 miles from home when I got the call that said he had passed away, which really came as a shock to me, knowing I had seen him happy and playing with my son just 3 days earlier.I never got to say goodbye to him but I have thanked the Lord above many times for sending this movie when he did to help me get through the ordeal.This very day, it has been announced that Glen Campbell has contracted this devastating disease. I highly recommend that his family find a copy of this movie and watch it closely, it will help them through it.I highly recommend it for anyone who has come in contact with this disease and sincerely hope one day a cure can be found for it.

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DonnaTN
2009/06/17

When this movie 1st came out Alzheimer's was not widely known about by the general public. It was the 1st time I ever heard about it. Thank Goodness I saw it! My mother came down with it less than 10 yrs after I 1st saw it, so I was prepared about knowing about it & recognized it in the early stages.I was her caregiver until she died some 10 yrs later. The movie was so sensitive & wonderfully portrayed! They had to 'rush' her deterioration because of time constraints of a 2 hour movie, but in real life it's much slower.But this movie was like giving me a road map to an unfamiliar and dark and scary place. It prepared me for what I had to face as my mother's caregiver.Later, my husband took care of his dad through it to the end, too. I'm glad we weren't "in the dark" when facing this incredibly horrible disease! This movie is a "must see" if a loved one is facing dementia! (Grab the tissue box! Such a touching performance!)

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i-stuarthamilton
2005/05/11

The plot is maudlin, but the performance by Ms Woodward is the best *ever* performance of someone acting as mentally ill. I spent a couple of years of my professional life observing patients with dementia as they sank further into mental oblivion and Ms Woodward was so convincing I found myself at several points reaching for a note pad to make case notes. The classic mistake often made by actors portraying people with dementia is either to look vacant or act forgetful. Both are part of what's required, of course, but there is a great deal of subtlety required as well and Ms Woodward is more than up to the task. It's not the happiest movie you'll ever see, but the failure to release this gem on DVD while a plethora of lesser drivel gets released on a daily basis is a great pity.

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bthcrlsol
2003/04/09

Joanne Woodward and Richard Kiley were superb in their roles as Barbara, the afflicted victim of the dreaded disease, and her loving, supportive husband, George. My heart really went out to them. I practically felt their suffering and pain. I wanted to help them myself. I felt like giving them, especially George, advice. They portrayed a happily married couple. Barbara was a college professor. And then BOOM!!!! Alzheimer's disease. Geraldine Fitzgerald, who portrayed Barbara's mother, Lorraine, was especially a heart-breaker, since she had to see her own daughter suffer the way she did. Though I am not a mother, I could still imagine her torment. It is just like watching your own child die, except this was worse--seeing your own daughter slipping into mentally incapacitation and you simply CANNOT to do anything about it. You are completely helpless. All the characters were and I, personally, felt so horribly bad for them, being they were a happy, well-adjusted family! However, I felt the conclusion, though I do NOT want to give it away, was ineffectual and inadequate. I knew it would NOT end on a positive note, but I was still disappointed. However, the acting was so authentic, believable, and convincing, that I actually felt like saying a prayer for this "family."

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