What a pleasant surprise. I've researched and written about these
"forbidden" cures for years.
What a delight to actually see an
interview with Rene Caisse. We even see a party thrown for Rene a
year before she died filled with people whom she had helped with
their cancers.
Harry Hoxsey shows up, and you get to see scenes from
a rare movie that Hoxsey himself made in 1988 called
You Don't Have
to Die. It is so rare, you can't even find a mention of it at the
Internet Movie Database.
I loved the research they did on this
film. It must have taken years to compile all the archived photos,
audio, and films.
They even got Morris Fishbein on film. This is the
creep who ran medicine for nearly 50 years. He destroyed many
people, many companies, and the damage he did to the health care
system of the time killed untold numbers of suffering humans.
However, the Hoxsey affair was his downfall. He was forced to resign
after libeling Hoxsey and eventually had to admit that Hoxsey was
curing cancer.
The section on
Max Gerson was interesting, especially
the deja vù section: they borrowed scenes from Dying to have Known.
The scenes they used were the most powerful, the contraposed scenes
of so-called medical experts proclaiming that no one has ever been
cured of cancer at the Gerson clinic, juxtaposed with patients
telling their story.
Finally, you'll see some of the latest advances
in alternative therapies, including a physician who is curing cancer
with baking soda even after he's lost his license to practice
medicine. For you history buffs, this is a must have.
For you people
looking for options outside of conventional medicine, this could
save your life.
It is very well done and well worth a watch.
- David Bonello
International Wellness Directory