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The Physician
The Physician — A journey out of darkness into light
2013 7.5 17.8K R views saved
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The Physician

2013 7.5 17.8K R views saved
The Physician

England, 1021. Rob Cole, a boy born in a miserable mining town, swears to become a physician and vanquish disease and death. His harsh path of many years, a quest for knowledge besieged by countless challenges and sacrifices, leads him to the remote Isfahan, in Persia, where he meets Ibn Sina, the greatest healer of his time.

Countries: DE
Languages: English
Content Rating: R
Runtime: 2hrs 35min
Status: Released
Release date: 2013-12-25
Release format: Streaming — May 22, 2014
Comments
Andre Schneider
@sniperbr 11 years ago

Surpreende!

0
Andre Schneider
@sniperbr 11 years ago

Surpreende!

0
@pokshyvka 11 years ago

Masterpiece, very well made, beautyful.

0
Schokominza
@schokominza 11 years ago

One of the best movies I have seen in a long time.

0
Siggi
@siggi963 8 months ago

Though by far not as great and deep as the book, it is still a very good movie. It depicts how backwards medicine was in Europe in the 11th century and how, relatively speaking, advanced it was at that time in the middle-east. The medicine of the Middle East at that time is the basis for the medicine still practiced nowadays in the western world. I still recommend that you also read the book, which covers several other elements of everyday life at that time.

0
Lee Brown Barrow Movie Buff
@lee-brown-barrow 3 years ago

Epic in scope with an excellent feel for time and place. Unfortunately, it goes on way too long, so while there are some great moments, the length works against it.

2
Alfredo
@alfgut 11 years ago

Nothing to do with the book, much worse than it.

0
@tomquadrat 11 years ago

Even Ben Kingsley cant´t save this boredom.

0
ltcomdata
@ltcomdata 9 years ago

Visually stunning movie about an English traveling barber called Robert who wishes to learn medicine from Avicenna, the renowned Early Medieval Muslim teacher. Against all odds, the Christian Englishman manages to do this --- but must hide his faith in order to do so. He defies traditional Christian, Islamic, and Jewish teaching by dissecting the dead in order to learn the reason for "side illness" --- appendicitis. And he figures out that plague is transmitted by parasitic fleas traveling on rats. All of this without learning a single word of Persian, and right before an extremist Muslim band sacks Isfahan and takes over. Robert also witnesses the suicide of Avicenna, and upon returning to England he introduces modern hospitals there.

The amount of anachronistic fairy tales inserted into this story is appalling. It makes it seem as if Avicenna was not responsible for the medical knowledge attributed to him, but was instead taught them by an Englishman --- thus reducing the place in history that Avicenna rightly deserves. And Avicenna died of all age, and most decidedly did not poison himself. And shall we talk about the medical insights of Robert the Englishman? He seems to have an understanding of modern medical knowledge --- culminating in the founding of his hospital --- that would make his trip to Muslim lands redundant.

Religion, too is given short shrift. Quite often it stands on the way of true scientific enlightenment. Christians, Muslims, and Jews are all shown as intolerant, unless they give way to the superior form of knowledge that is science. But this ignores the well-established facts that Avicenna was a devout Muslim, for instance, or that the inheritors of the Muslim science depicted in this book were very much devout Christians. And it is a fact that by the time of Jesus --- much more so by the 11th century --- the Jews had given up on stoning as a form of punishment for adultery.

Yes, the movie is stunning. But no, it is decidedly not history.

3
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