Article 63JM3 The Cancer Conflict review – poignant documentary on alternative cancer therapies

The Cancer Conflict review – poignant documentary on alternative cancer therapies

by
Mike McCahill
from on (#63JM3)

Two patients take sharply differing approaches as they attempt to beat life-threatening tumours on their own terms

Released to coincide with World Cancer Research day, Thomas Meadmore's tricky yet involving documentary follows two Britons going rogue in search of a better quality of treatment. Grant Branton, from Brighton, is a sometime biologist reeling after early tests spotted tumours in his bowels while missing shadows in his bones; Surinder Paul, landed with breast cancer, hopes to avoid a mastectomy by leaning hard into oils, juicing and cravatted energy healers - what oncological voice-of-reason Rob Glynne-Jones calls quackery". Both have taken their lives into their own hands, which notionally affords them greater control but also obliges them to take critical decisions - even fashion their own suppositories - on ever-dwindling energy reserves.

It's tricky because Meadmore largely detaches these subjects from any context beyond the rooms they're in. (There's nothing about Branton's career as a commercials and music video producer, for example.) Emphasis is thereby placed firmly on the individual, but many viewers will want more about Branton and Paul's precise relationship to the NHS, and - if they went private - how and how much they're paying. (It's unclear from what is shown, possibly reflecting the blurred lines of modern British healthcare.) As carefully applied voiceover takes pains to establish, these two are outliers: Branton's Facebook interactions and a troubling encounter with a self-appointed American guru illustrate how close we are to the fringes of anti-science conspiracy theory.

Yet both remain compelling figures, eliciting natural sympathy and concern as they eye the enemy within. (No melodramatic fights" or battles" here - just the humdrum reality of endless tests and meetings to reveal results of tests.) Alpha-adjacent Branton endures horrific coughing fits to reaffirm his love for wife Christine; while Paul has the advantage of a large, loving, supportive family, she's evidently determined to go her own way. For his part, Meadmore bides ever-more-valuable time, monitoring his subjects' ebbs and flows, allowing them to make their own choices and us to form our own opinions, before finally ensuring the facts of these poignant case studies speak for themselves.

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