Baltimore Sun

Revealing documentar­y on Fox best in day-to-day scenes

- By Michael Phillips

McFly: The surname of the time-traveler Michael J. Fox played in “Back to the Future” suits that character, by design. It also captures the propulsive stardom and perpetual motion of the actor who became a star, then a superstar and then a struggling, secretive superstar dealing with a degenerati­ve brain disease.

The Edmonton, Alberta, native was diagnosed with Parkinson’s in 1991, when he was 29 years old. Fox kept it under wraps for much of the 1990s. Masking his tremors as cleverly as possible, he soldiered through his second major sitcom, “Spin City,” the one following the star-making ’80s phenomenon “Family Ties.” He went public in 1998 and has become a fundraisin­g force for Parkinson’s research.

Fox, who turns 62 in June, is living a life of supreme paradox. It took Parkinson’s, he says, to slow down and realize the heartbeat of his days, day by day, step by step. Success? That he dashed through on the way to something else. Davis Guggenheim’s film, “Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie,” chronicles that something else.

The best parts of “Still” simply show us what Fox’s days entail. We see him working with a physical therapist on strategies to avoid another fall. In closeups of Fox, the retired actor regards Guggenheim’s camera in various states of tamped-down physical pain. Periodical­ly, especially after a dose of dopamine, those symptoms calm down. Before Parkinson’s, he tells the off-camera Guggenheim, “I was never still.”

For Fox, typically the smallest boy in his classes, the early years meant darting away from larger and meaner boys, or parrying potential threats with a wisecrack. He was funny and made the most of it. It led Fox to try Hollywood (after a Canadian sitcom, “Leo and Me”) as a high school dropout. He struggled for three long, lean years, winning a few small parts, losing out on many more, including Timothy Hutton’s role in “Ordinary People.”

“Family Ties,” on which Fox took off as Reaganera paragon Alex Keaton, changed everything, while refocusing creator Gary David Goldberg’s show away from the parents and directly onto Fox

(and, secondaril­y, Justine Bateman). All this, leading into “Back to the Future” and beyond, makes for a classic star-is-born triumph, though even prior to his Parkinson’s diagnosis, the obstacles and evasions loomed. Fox’s marriage to his “Family Ties” co-star Tracy Pollan — they’ve been married for 34 years — endured many long distances (Fox never wasn’t working, often a long way from Los Angeles), and Pollan’s near-solo parenting of four kids.

Meantime, Fox’s alcoholism and “hide-the-bottle” coping mechanisms helped him “dissociate” (his word) from his own worsening condition.

Now 30 years sober, Fox’s resolve, his wit and acuity more than mitigates what’s not entirely useful in Guggenheim’s filmmaking approach.

The documentar­y goes in for a lot of flash and dazzle: elaboratel­y slick dramatic re-creations of his earlier years; constant and obvious use of Fox’s TV and film appearance­s to comment on a crisis or a turning point; an intrusive musical score. It can get to be more competitio­n than context for its subject.

These are objections regarding the how, and how much, of a specific type of documentar­y technique. Most folks will not mind the way “Still” handles things. At its best, it backs off and lets Fox’s presence, the grace-filled and inspiring way he has risen to an extremely tough occasion, reflect the man’s lives and times.

MPA rating:

R (for language)

Running time: 1:35

How to watch: In select theaters May 12, streaming on AppleTV+

 ?? APPLE TV+ ?? Michael J. Fox discusses Parkinson’s disease and a life of challenges in “Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie.”
APPLE TV+ Michael J. Fox discusses Parkinson’s disease and a life of challenges in “Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie.”

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