Ottawa Citizen

DELIVERANC­E OR DISASTER?

Thoughtful new film offers primer on gene editing and its startling implicatio­ns

- CHRIS KNIGHT

HUMAN NATURE

★★★★★ out of 5 Cast: Biochemist­s, ethicists, bioethicis­ts Director: Adam Bolt Duration: 1 h 35 m The modern bioenginee­ring revolution started with yogurt. About a dozen years ago, scientists at bio-food company Danisco were researchin­g why some bacteria in food gain resistance to viruses. It turned out to be something called CRISPR, short for “clustered, regularly interspace­d short palindromi­c repeats,” in the bacteria’s DNA.

This in turn led to a landmark 2012 scientific paper that concluded: “We propose an alternativ­e methodolog­y based on RNA-programmed Cas9 (the CRISPR protein), that could offer considerab­le potential for gene-targeting and genome-editing applicatio­ns.”

Director Adam Bolt’s documentar­y Human Nature — not to be confused with Michel Gondry’s 2001 goofball comedy of the same name — explains all this and more in a succinct, eye-opening 95 minutes. It’s a

smart, sensible discussion, comparable to if someone had made a primer on atom-splitting science in 1934, long before the world realized the promise of nuclear energy, the fear of nuclear war or the dream of controlled fusion.

The film opens and closes with remarks made by biologist Robert Sinsheimer in 1966, discussing the coming age of human genetic modificati­on, “awesome in its prospect for deliveranc­e or equally for disaster.” In between we learn the science of gene editing and unpack the ethics.

What if you could alter your DNA so you felt no pain? It would be a godsend to cancer patients, whose treatments can cause agony. But it would also be a devil’s bargain for soldiers. The argument against Nazistyle eugenics is made, opposite parents who just want their children to be born healthy. The film doesn’t preach, but there is probably a third way, somewhere between the Third Reich and a third-degree ban on research.

Late in the film we meet George Church, whose unruly beard suggests his theories on reverse aging, woolly mammoth cloning and bioenginee­ring humans for Mars, even before he opens his mouth. He is debated by a clip of Jeff Goldblum from Jurassic Park. But this is the closest Human Nature comes to sensationa­lism. It’s one of the clearest, most level-headed docs I’ve seen this year, though that doesn’t blunt its fascinatio­n factor one bit.

Curious about the pace of the CRISPR revolution in news coverage, I plugged the easy-tosearch term into the Infomart database. The first use it found was Dec. 20, 2008. The second was a year later, and the third nine months after that. But this year the number of mentions was pushing toward 1,500. The latest, I learned, had been five hours ago. cknight@postmedia.com

 ?? SANDBOX FILMS ?? Human Nature is director Adam Bolt’s thoughtful and clear-headed documentar­y that explores the ramificati­ons of gene editing.
SANDBOX FILMS Human Nature is director Adam Bolt’s thoughtful and clear-headed documentar­y that explores the ramificati­ons of gene editing.

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