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* {{Tagline}}: "Don't hope for a miracle. Make one."
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It is about a man, John Crowley, whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy.
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It is about a man, John Crowley, whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe syndrome results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy.
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''Extraordinary Measures'' is a 2010 American medical drama film BasedOnATrueStory and [[TheFilmOfTheBook the book]] "The Cure: How a Father Raised $100 Million — And Bucked the Medical Establishment — in a Quest to Save His Children''.
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''Extraordinary Measures'' is a 2010 American medical drama film BasedOnATrueStory and [[TheFilmOfTheBook the book]] "The ''The Cure: How a Father Raised $100 Million — And Bucked the Medical Establishment — in a Quest to Save His Children''.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/extraordinary_measures_poster2_4463.jpg]]
A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Creator/KeriRussell plays his wife Aileen and Creator/HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
!!This film uses the following tropes:
A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Creator/KeriRussell plays his wife Aileen and Creator/HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
!!This film uses the following tropes:
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It is about a man, John
Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Creator/KeriRussell plays his wife Aileen and Creator/HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to
!!This film
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!!''Extraordinary Measures'' uses the following
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* CastingGag: Creator/HarrisonFord and Creator/BrendanFraser are both famous for playing {{Adventure Archaeologist}}s: Ford as Franchise/IndianaJones, and Fraser as Rick O'Connell from ''Film/TheMummy'' series.
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* CastingGag: Creator/HarrisonFord and Creator/BrendanFraser are both famous for playing {{Adventure Archaeologist}}s: Ford as Franchise/IndianaJones, and Fraser as Rick O'Connell from ''Film/TheMummy'' series.''Film/TheMummyTrilogy''.
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* CastingGag: Creator/HarrisonFord and Creator/BrendanFraser are both famous for playing {{Adventure Archaeologist}}s: Ford as Franchise/IndianaJones, and Fraser as Rick O'Connell from ''Film/TheMummy'' series.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and Creator/HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Keri Russell Creator/KeriRussell plays his wife Aileen and Creator/HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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fixed the namespace.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord Creator/HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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Justified Trope means there\'s an in-story reason for it happening, not to behind-the-scenes reasons.
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* RaceLift: Robert Stonehill is a composite of several people, mainly one Dr. Yuan-Tsong Chen. Semi-[[JustifiedTrope justified]] in that Chen refused to be fictionalized.
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* RaceLift: Robert Stonehill is a composite of several people, mainly one Dr. Yuan-Tsong Chen. Semi-[[JustifiedTrope justified]] Semi-justified in that Chen refused to be fictionalized.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. BrendanFraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. BrendanFraser Creator/BrendanFraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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Changed line(s) 3,4 (click to see context) from:
A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Brendan Fraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Brendan Fraser BrendanFraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
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[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/extraordinary_measures_poster2_4463.jpg]]
A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Brendan Fraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
!!This film uses the following tropes:
* AsYouKnow: Practically every other line is this, necessitated somewhat by the amount of medical exposition that has to be dumped without the luxury of an audience viewpoint character who facilitates such explanations.
* BumblingDad: Subverted in the beginning of the movie. Megan was sad that her Dad hadn't showed up for bowling, but he made it for the cake. In any other movie he might have arrived at the ''wrong'' bowling alley, this was only to show that he was busy but still very mindful of them. Throughout the entire movie he is running himself ragged trying to get everything down.
* TheCameo: The real John Crowley appears as one of the Venture Capitalist board members.
* CompositeCharacter: Stonehill is fictional, the merging of a half-dozen scientists spread across several different universities.
* InsufferableGenius: Stonehill is not very easy to get along with.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Stonehill again, although much of the jerk fades away by the end. He has sympathy for John and his kids but constantly reminds him that making the drug is not a simple process.
* LoudOfWar: Stonehill prefers ear bleeding loud music while working. This works okay at his university office (late at night), at the reseach lab he had built in the middle of a field, but causes problems when he becomes one of a dozen other lab scientists at a major research facility.
* NotListeningToMeAreYou: Megan pulls this on her father at one point.
* PragmaticAdaptation: The Crowley kids were significantly younger during the events of the story than what was in the film, and the effects of Pompe reduced muscle density across their entire body, meaning they couldn't even smile. It would have been difficult to cast especially young children who couldn't smile into a role that is the emotional force behind the movie.
* PresentDayPast: The real-life events the film (loosely) follows happened from roughly 2000 to 2003. Doesn't stop the Crowley children from playing with an [[ProductPlacement Nintendo Wii]], first released in 2006.
* RaceLift: Robert Stonehill is a composite of several people, mainly one Dr. Yuan-Tsong Chen. Semi-[[JustifiedTrope justified]] in that Chen refused to be fictionalized.
* SoapOperaDisease: Mostly averted. You could substitute almost any illness and still have the same story, but the actual effects and how the children are suffering from it is well-defined.
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A 2010 movie BasedOnATrueStory and the book "The Cure" about John Crowley whose dedication to saving his two children from a genetic disease named Pompe results in him becoming a driving force in the development of an enzyme therapy. Brendan Fraser plays John, Keri Russell plays his wife Aileen and HarrisonFord is Dr. Robert Stonehill, the man whose revolutionary medical theories are the key to everything.
!!This film uses the following tropes:
* AsYouKnow: Practically every other line is this, necessitated somewhat by the amount of medical exposition that has to be dumped without the luxury of an audience viewpoint character who facilitates such explanations.
* BumblingDad: Subverted in the beginning of the movie. Megan was sad that her Dad hadn't showed up for bowling, but he made it for the cake. In any other movie he might have arrived at the ''wrong'' bowling alley, this was only to show that he was busy but still very mindful of them. Throughout the entire movie he is running himself ragged trying to get everything down.
* TheCameo: The real John Crowley appears as one of the Venture Capitalist board members.
* CompositeCharacter: Stonehill is fictional, the merging of a half-dozen scientists spread across several different universities.
* InsufferableGenius: Stonehill is not very easy to get along with.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Stonehill again, although much of the jerk fades away by the end. He has sympathy for John and his kids but constantly reminds him that making the drug is not a simple process.
* LoudOfWar: Stonehill prefers ear bleeding loud music while working. This works okay at his university office (late at night), at the reseach lab he had built in the middle of a field, but causes problems when he becomes one of a dozen other lab scientists at a major research facility.
* NotListeningToMeAreYou: Megan pulls this on her father at one point.
* PragmaticAdaptation: The Crowley kids were significantly younger during the events of the story than what was in the film, and the effects of Pompe reduced muscle density across their entire body, meaning they couldn't even smile. It would have been difficult to cast especially young children who couldn't smile into a role that is the emotional force behind the movie.
* PresentDayPast: The real-life events the film (loosely) follows happened from roughly 2000 to 2003. Doesn't stop the Crowley children from playing with an [[ProductPlacement Nintendo Wii]], first released in 2006.
* RaceLift: Robert Stonehill is a composite of several people, mainly one Dr. Yuan-Tsong Chen. Semi-[[JustifiedTrope justified]] in that Chen refused to be fictionalized.
* SoapOperaDisease: Mostly averted. You could substitute almost any illness and still have the same story, but the actual effects and how the children are suffering from it is well-defined.
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