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  1. Brief Synopsis. A father of a young child with epilepsy learns of a drug that could cure her, but is only available in Europe, not in the United States. He begins his mission to obtain the drug for his daughter at any cost.

  2. As seventies home invasion exploitation flicks go, Fight for Your Life is particularly mean spirited! The film takes obvious influence from the likes of The Last House on the Left, but does the theme with racial undertones as we watch a trio of criminals invade the home of a black minister. Much of the dialogue is made up of racial slurs, and ...

  3. www.primevideo.com › detail › Fight-For-LifePrime Video: Fight For Life

    Fight For Life. Based on a true story of an Ohio optometrist and his family's fight for the life of their 6-year-old daughter who suffers from epileptic convulsions and their efforts to get a new drug approved by the US Food and Drug Administration. IMDb 5.8 1 h 34 min 1987. X-Ray 7+. Drama. Free trial of MGM+. Watch with MGM+. Start your 7-day ...

  4. The Fight for Life, un film de Pare Lorentz de 1940. The Fight for Life was documentary filmmaker Pare Lorentz' first "dramatic" film, utilizing the talents of several top New York stage actors.

  5. FIGHT FOR LIFE. Directed by. Elliot Silverstein. United States, 1987. TV Movie, Drama, Biography. 95. Synopsis. Jerry Lewis plays an Ohio optometrist who has a six-year old daughter with epilepsy. He fights to get the FDA to approve a drug (at that time o ...

  6. A record of the life of the Netsilingmiut in the area around Kugaaruk (formerly Pelly Bay) in the Canadian Arctic during their last migratory camp. This film was produced, with commentary, from footage filmed over a period of three years, from summer 1963 to the late winter of 1965, and released in 1967 for the Netsilik series. The series was an attempt to recreate the traditional lifestyle of ...

  7. Jerry Lewis plays an Ohio optometrist who has a six-year old daughter with epilepsy. He fights to get the FDA to approve a drug (at that time only available in England) for use in the U.S.

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