MEDICINE MAN (1992)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
Connery is Dr. Robert Campbell, a gray-haired, ponytail-wearing biochemist living in the Amazonian forest. He is searching a cure for the greatest plague of the twentieth century - in a word, cancer. And he's found it. It has to do with ants and a specific kind of flower but, lo and behold, this is an ecological adventure movie (yep, Spielberg made his own several years later with "The Lost World"). You see there are mercenaries who are burning down the rainforests, a continuing ecological and environmental disaster, to build a road. As Campbell explains, "No rain, no rainforests!" Thank you Dr. Campbell.
And in the great tradition of the Kate Capshaw role of Irritable Female Characters comes Dr. Crane (Lorraine Bracco), nicknamed Dr. Bronx by Campbell, a research assistant from a pharmaceutical company who has come to investigate Campbell. Has the man completed any kind of research and can he prove it? Yes, of course. Even I learned that in General Science in high school - if you have proposed a theory, prove it with samples and notes.
Naturally, we get lots of truly scenic vistas, lots of rope climbing, a nasty spill into the river and down a hillside, scenes of comic relief involving some bark that is more potent than caffeine, lots of natives, a lot of native womens' breasts, lots of dancing in the night by a bonfire, a disturbing nightmare, and no chance at all of seeing Bracco's breasts (hey, this is a PG-13 movie).
Of course, "Medicine Man" is occasionally a little too humorous, intentional or not, and some scenes play off as being a little too campy (Connery in a headdress for one). But this is marginally better than the average good/bad movie. Connery is in full command and dominates every scene he's in. Lorraine Bracco, who only has a handful of moments where she is restrained, may make you want to scratch your fingernails on a blackboard. Still, Connery and Bracco do make a good team. The ending is almost too good for what precedes it, and there is a stunning confrontation with a real medicine man that depicts a far more serious movie than the one we are watching.
Basically, "Medicine Man" is a 1930's adventure movie with an ecological theme upgraded to modern sensibilities. If it had been made in the 30's, Frank Buck would've been cast in the Campbell role. Connery gives it the prestige to differentiate it slightly from the norm.







