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 Deja Vu (2006)
IMDB rating: 7.10
Plot: After an explosion on a ferry kills over 500 people including a large group of party-going sailors, an ATF agent investigates the crime. AN FBI agent also joins the investigation. Impressed with the ATF agent’s skills, the FBI agent invites him to join a new team that has a new program that uses satellite technology to look backwards in time for 4-1/2 days to try to capture the terrorist. Meanwhile a young woman who was burned washes up on shore. Meant to look like part of of the explosion, the body arrives at its location too soon, which leads the agents to believe her death is related to the explosion. As they use the new technology to study the woman, the ATF agent determines that this is not satellite imagery but somehow is using a time warp. From this point in the film, the movie moves from a crime film to a sci-fi time paradox film. Nonetheless, the action is non-stop and always captivating. The end of the film may be confusing to some people, but it is all laid out if one cares to look carefully. Contains some extreme violence that some may find disturbing, particularly during the explosion when many people are shown jumping off the boat in flames.
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Directors: Scott Tony
Actors: Washington Denzel,Kilmer Val,Caviezel James,Goldberg Adam,Henson Elden,Greenwood Bruce,Hutchman Rich,Craven Matt,Howe Brian,Castillo Enrique,Phinney Mark,Action,Drama,Romance,Sci-Fi,Thriller,
MS?? Epilepsy?? Vitamin D and B12 deficiency. Changes on MRI scan.?
I’ve tried to look it up. My sister has been having episodes of double vision frequently. Sometimes nausea accompanies them. She will have a splitting headache with vomiting for hours. She will have periods of deja vu and be unable to speak or move. These symptoms will last 45 sec. to 3 minutes. Afterward she slowly recovers and the recovery can take up to an hour until she feels completely normal. She has also had pains in her arms. I have noticed things about her too. Sometimes I’ll mention things like Hurricane Katrina and the flooding of New Orleans, and she won’t know what I’m talking about. I’m sorry but you have to have lived under a rock not to at least know what I was talking about. (Our oldest sister was diagnosed with epilepsy. She also has MTHFR and factor v leiden, and terrible trouble with blood clots.) My sister went to the doctor for her complaints. The doctor said she is severely deficient in vitamin D. He said she was low in B12 too. He said her MRI scan of her brain (with contrast) showed an abnormal part in her brain. She isn’t as good with medical term as I, and I haven’t seen the report, so I will tell you as much as I gleaned from her phone call. The doctor said it was in a lower part of the lobe, and it was near the brain stem. I’m sorry I’m not much clearer, but she couldn’t pronounce the words.
She lived in Maine for 40 years. I know the rate of MS is higher in the northern latitudes. She now lives in Florida. No she doesn’t like milk, and she doesn’t sunbathe, but with the strong sunshine you would think just by accident she would get the vitamin D she needs.
The doctor has sent her to a neurologist. She is waiting for the appt. The doctor said it could be MS, but he wasn’t sure.
Would MS symptoms be that quick? I know there are good and bad days, but I would never have thought MS because of the length of time of her "spells" with her inability to talk/move, and how fast she seems to recover. She does have double vision almost all the time. Sometimes she will feel fine for weeks, and then have headaches for months on end. She went to previous doctors but they blew her off. Has anybody had symptoms such as these? By the way, she is 41, and these symptoms started about 7 years ago. They have been increasing in frequency. She recently had a baby about 1 year ago.
Any feedback, suggestions, are appreciated!
I wouldn’t ignore the recommendation to supplement vitamin D and B12. They can give her a shot of B12 that would be better than any pill. They have 5000 units of D3 at the health food store. She should start both right away.
If you research the benefits of vitamin D, you’ll find it helps almost everything.
vrrJT3 | Feb 03, 2010