A documentary on young actress, Marianna Palka, as she confronts her risk of Huntington's Disease.A documentary on young actress, Marianna Palka, as she confronts her risk of Huntington's Disease.A documentary on young actress, Marianna Palka, as she confronts her risk of Huntington's Disease.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 3 nominations total
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia"And the lion's mouth opens and yer staring at his teeth. And his jaws start closin' with you underneath"
The title 'The Lion's Mouth Opens' is taken from lines from a poem that Bob Dylan wrote about Woody Guthrie called 'Last Thoughts on Woody Guthrie' which Marianna can recite in its entirety (it takes about 7 minutes). The story of the poem is that Dylan went to visit Woody Guthrie (arguably his greatest early influence) in Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital, where Guthrie was dying from Huntingtons disease. Dylan recited the poem live only once, after he returned to the stage at the end of his April 12, 1963 performance at New York's Town Hall. Dylan explained that "there's this book coming out, and they asked me to write something about Woody, sort of like what does Woody Guthrie mean to you in 25 words, and I couldn't do it, I wrote out five pages".
Featured review
In a lot of ways, Marianna Palka is different from most people you know. She is a director and actress, and moved to New York from Scotland at age 18 with dreams of making films and less than $100 to her name. She made those dreams come true, as a film she wrote, directed and starred in premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Some in Palka's close circle of friends are well-known actors and actresses, like Jason Ritter and Bryce Dallas Howard.
There is one crucially important, life-defining way, however, in which Palka desperately wants to be like everyone else. Like an estimated 200,000 Americans, Palka is at risk for Huntington disease (HD). There's a 50-50 chance she inherited the disease from her father, who started showing symptoms when Palka was eight years old. Others in Palka's family have undergone presymptomatic genetic testing for the disease, and will eventually develop the cognitive, emotional and physical symptoms of this progressive, neurodegenerative disease for which there is presently no cure.
In the permeating "The Lion's Mouth Opens," the Academy Award shortlisted documentary directed by Lucy Walker, Palka and the audience find out her medical fate.
"Getting a positive result is like a death sentence," Palka says in the film. "And if you get the opposite, then you just get to be like everyone else." In one of the most acclaimed short documentaries of the year, the two-time Academy Award nominated Walker adeptly drops the viewer off in Palka's apartment the night before she receives her definitive genetic testing results. Thanks to Palka's amazing, supportive and loving group of friends that come over for dinner, this is perhaps the most comforting room that's also filled floor-to-ceiling with cutting tension ever shown on screen. Her support system is solidly in place, but it is Palka's anxious if not clearheaded bravery that carries her and everyone else through that night and what is to come the following day at UCLA Medical Center.
Palka is described by her friends and Walker as a brilliant person with an incredible mind, which comes across in the film through her subdued sense of humor and ability to glide from one emotion to the next; worry, to assuredness, to comfort, to denial. It all feels genuinely Marianna, and it all comes plainly through the screen and into the viewers' hearts.
The simplicity of the way Walker made "The Lion's Mouth Opens" (title taken from a line in a Bob Dylan poem about Woody Guthrie that becomes central to the film) presents what unfolds as it should be: raw, honest and without pretense. A single camera captures Palka's journey. There is some touching interview footage with Palka's mother and Ritter, but there is no dramatic music or narrators. There's just life, and the most important moment in one person's life at that.
This film succeeds at opening viewers' eyes to a moment of revelation few will ever face or even fully understand (Palka's results are revealed in the film, but not in this review). Thanks to Palka's courage and openness, the viewer is left jolted, pulse quickened, but with a heart more open than the agape jaws of any frighteningly foreboding lion's mouth.
In a 28-minute documentary, you might expect to be plucked out of what has just unfolded just as easily as you were dropped in, but due to "The Lion's Mouth Opens" commanding impact, you are likely to be unready and unwilling to detach yourself. In that case, simply telling someone about HD and what you saw in this remarkable film goes a long way to spread awareness. It's an incredible gift to the HD community that Palka and Walker are using Palka's story to make a difference by shining a spotlight on this disease and the lives it impacts.
(adapted from review originally written by the author for University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine website)
There is one crucially important, life-defining way, however, in which Palka desperately wants to be like everyone else. Like an estimated 200,000 Americans, Palka is at risk for Huntington disease (HD). There's a 50-50 chance she inherited the disease from her father, who started showing symptoms when Palka was eight years old. Others in Palka's family have undergone presymptomatic genetic testing for the disease, and will eventually develop the cognitive, emotional and physical symptoms of this progressive, neurodegenerative disease for which there is presently no cure.
In the permeating "The Lion's Mouth Opens," the Academy Award shortlisted documentary directed by Lucy Walker, Palka and the audience find out her medical fate.
"Getting a positive result is like a death sentence," Palka says in the film. "And if you get the opposite, then you just get to be like everyone else." In one of the most acclaimed short documentaries of the year, the two-time Academy Award nominated Walker adeptly drops the viewer off in Palka's apartment the night before she receives her definitive genetic testing results. Thanks to Palka's amazing, supportive and loving group of friends that come over for dinner, this is perhaps the most comforting room that's also filled floor-to-ceiling with cutting tension ever shown on screen. Her support system is solidly in place, but it is Palka's anxious if not clearheaded bravery that carries her and everyone else through that night and what is to come the following day at UCLA Medical Center.
Palka is described by her friends and Walker as a brilliant person with an incredible mind, which comes across in the film through her subdued sense of humor and ability to glide from one emotion to the next; worry, to assuredness, to comfort, to denial. It all feels genuinely Marianna, and it all comes plainly through the screen and into the viewers' hearts.
The simplicity of the way Walker made "The Lion's Mouth Opens" (title taken from a line in a Bob Dylan poem about Woody Guthrie that becomes central to the film) presents what unfolds as it should be: raw, honest and without pretense. A single camera captures Palka's journey. There is some touching interview footage with Palka's mother and Ritter, but there is no dramatic music or narrators. There's just life, and the most important moment in one person's life at that.
This film succeeds at opening viewers' eyes to a moment of revelation few will ever face or even fully understand (Palka's results are revealed in the film, but not in this review). Thanks to Palka's courage and openness, the viewer is left jolted, pulse quickened, but with a heart more open than the agape jaws of any frighteningly foreboding lion's mouth.
In a 28-minute documentary, you might expect to be plucked out of what has just unfolded just as easily as you were dropped in, but due to "The Lion's Mouth Opens" commanding impact, you are likely to be unready and unwilling to detach yourself. In that case, simply telling someone about HD and what you saw in this remarkable film goes a long way to spread awareness. It's an incredible gift to the HD community that Palka and Walker are using Palka's story to make a difference by shining a spotlight on this disease and the lives it impacts.
(adapted from review originally written by the author for University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine website)
- seanathompson
- Dec 8, 2014
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime15 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content