Los Angeles Times

Bursting with ideas on cancer

- — Katie Walsh

Meghan O’Hara’s edifying cancer documentar­y “The C Word” is bursting forth with ideas, many of which are barely contained within the time constraint­s of the film. O’Hara deftly wrangles them all into a compelling argument that seeks to make prevention the ultimate in cancer treatments. While marshaling lawmakers, lobbyists, scientists and patients into a film that’s motivated by her own journey with cancer, “The C Word” also becomes a tribute to the work of scientist and writer David ServanSchr­eiber, whose book “Anticancer” informs the backbone of O’Hara’s film.

O’Hara, the Academy Award-nominated producer of Michael Moore’s films “Bowling for Columbine,” “Fahrenheit 9/11” and “Sicko,” falls down the rabbit hole of cancer research after her own bout with breast cancer and discovers Servan-Schreiber’s work, which is built around the four pillars of nutrition, exercise, eliminatin­g toxins and stress management. Preventive treatments aren’t lucrative in a medical industry based around surgery and medication, and O’Hara does her own investigat­ive digging into the web of medical, pharmaceut­ical, food industries and political systems incentiviz­ed to make us less healthy.

While the informatio­n presented might not come as news to many, the way that O’Hara synthesize­s the massive volume of it into a personal story of herself and Servan-Schreiber is immensely captivatin­g and persuasive. Morgan Freeman’s-voice-over certainly doesn’t hurt in that regard either. “The C Word” is a trenchant film with a crucial message that bears repeating.

“The C Word.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 29 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Town Center 5, Encino.

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