This college dropout was bedridden for 11 years. Then he invented a surgery and cured himself
Doug Lindsay invented surgeryTom Long: Seachange star reveals 'miracle' recovery
NEWS.com.au
'I will never hear my father's voice': Ilya Kaminsky on deafness and escaping the Soviet Union | Books | The Guardian.
Kaminsky himself lost most of his hearing after contracting mumps aged four in the Ukrainian city of Odessa. “The Soviet doctor said it was just a cold and sent us away,” he says, without self-pity. This life-changing medical misjudgment would connect him with history in ways that he is still processing. “It is on the day Brezhnev dies that my mother learns of my deafness, and the odyssey of doctors and hospitals begins,” he wrote recently. “My mother shouts at senior citizens in public transport to promptly get up please and give her sick child a seat; my father, embarrassed, hides on the other side of the trolley. I cannot hear a word … Brezhnev is dead. Strangers wear black clothes in public. Thus begins the history of my deafness.”
Is Motion Smoothing Ruining Cinema? Vulture
Department Q: The Keeper Of Lost Causes (Photo: IFC) ... their days out in the field, following leads all over Scandinavia
Breaking all Danish box office records, the acclaimed Department Q series is the embodiment of "Nordic Noir". To celebrate the final instalment, Purity of Vengeance, we revisit the previous three cinematic renderings of Jussi Adler Olsen's blockbuster novels.
Australian Premiere
Heralded as the best instalment of the series, Carl Mørck and Assad return for the chilling final chapter in the Nordic-noir Department Q series to investigate three mysterious mummified bodies.
A difficult but unswerving Danish cop reopens the case of a female politician who allegedly committed suicide in this award-winning, great- looking and well-acted Scandinavian crime film based on the bestselling novel of the same name.
This hugely successful follow-on from The Keeper of Lost Causesbrings back the original cast to investigate what really happened in the 1990s at one of the country’s poshest boarding schools.
With the best opening of a local film in 15 years in its native Denmark, A Conspiracy of Faith has been hailed the best Jussi Adler-Olsen adaptation to date