Light of Mine (2011) Poster

(2011)

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9/10
Beauty and insight
peter-94-53783030 June 2011
Portland filmmaker Brett Eichenberger's first feature film tells the story of Owen, an aspiring photographer with an eye disease that has left him without sight in one eye and will soon leave him blind in both. A powerful look at a man and woman facing a crisis. A genetic ailment is about to steal his sight. The fact that he's a photographer adds both irony and insight. He and his wife choose to spend his last days with eyesight on a journey to Yellowstone Park. Owen, determined to photograph despite his loss of sight, discovers that he has a choice to see what he wants to see. Told with grace and beauty. First rate cinematography coaxes hope out from seeming tragedy. A fine indie film worth seeing with someone you love.
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7/10
Take this journey of how one photographer's loss of sight does not impede his ability to see what's truly important!
robynjensen113 June 2013
This movie does a fine job of capturing the emotional impact Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) has on both the individual affected and their loved one(s). Having a teenage son who lost his sight to LHON just one year ago, the feelings are still raw. The way in which the wife supports her husband and encourages him mirrors precisely how a loved one should respond in this situation. She does not become overly protective, nor is she insensitive to his loss. She balances sensitivity and encouragement equally. This film captures the grieving process realistically as well as portrays the essential need to cope with the loss in a healthy way so that one can continue to live life to the fullest. Though Owen's future is not revealed, the movie leaves you with the sense that LHON will not rob Owen of joy.
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10/10
Light of Mine Opens a Little Window Letting In Some Weighty Wonder
ulpanaylaylo30 June 2011
There cannot be a spoiler as the very first scene starring the principal actors Rebecca Sanborn and Ji Tanzer visiting an ocular specialist delivers a diagnosis that the rest of this swift and emotionally powerful movie forces us, along with the characters to empathetically adjust to. Beautifully filmed in lush if twilit Portland, the verdant and dun awesome Columbia River Gorge and a Yellowstone Park more vivid than the Flintstones. The actors all seem natural, as though playing themselves, yet from the Q & A at the premiere at the Whitsell Theater in the Portland Art Museum this is not a biographical story. Without the volatile and edgy conflict of a John Cassavettes film, "Light of Mine" conveys the stakes involved for the characters, suggesting the gravity of inevitability, yet leavened with the little window of wonder that a loving human (if a Higher Power happens to be away on business) can provide. This movie feels like it planted a seed that will blossom within me whenever the going gets tougher than I feel up to handling...
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10/10
Perspective of an Ophthalmologist
selvadurai-d19 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I would have to say that from the standpoint of a physician, let alone an ophthalmologist, it is always nice to see a film that tackles the difficult life challenges we all face when disease strikes. LHON is a genetically inherited disease that is dramatic, unsympathetic and relatively rapid in onset. It can be as devastating as it is rare. Having diagnosed a patient with this disease when I was a medical student and having seen what happened to that poor young man, this condition has had a lasting impact on my career. I would recommend you watch the LHON documentary filmed by the same group. It really adds an added element of optimism at the end of the movie. The movie doesn't sugar coat the ending but provides gentle optimism that comes with acceptance of things that we often would rather deny. I think the writer and director have done a wonderful job researching and filming this movie. I would highly recommend this film... it is not something your 2 or 10 year old would enjoy but it is very touching and honest piece that you don't come across every day.
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10/10
Excellent portrayal of dealing with devastating prognosis!
opie-team24 January 2012
My husband and I were very excited to learn of and to be able to attend "Light of Mine". We were especially surprised to learn that the film directly addressed LHON, Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy--the same affliction my husband and his brother both have. Although my husband and his brother both lost most of their sight before they were married/while still living at home with their parents, this film still addressed some of the emotion I have dealt with being the spouse of someone who is legally blind/having lost their sight. The amazing range of emotions those involved face, as well as the possible visual affect taking place for the afflicted, were competently addressed. Being a fully-sighted individual, the scenery of Yellowstone was breathtaking (having been there before, the varied landscapes and wildlife were vivid reminders of what I experienced)! We so appreciated the attention to detail put into this movie. Thank you, and we look forward to it coming out in more venues and on more media in the near future.
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