A Day for a Miracle (TV Movie 2011) Poster

(2011 TV Movie)

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10/10
Much better than most Hollywood emergency room stories
peter-legisa22 January 2012
The film is, in my opinion, much better than most Hollywood emergency room stories. It flows naturally, but grabs your attention. Gerti Drassl, Leon Baumgartner and Erwin Steinhauer were excellent in their roles.

One piece of this story begins on a family farm in the hills of Carinthia, the southernmost province of Austria.

The other line of events happens in the local hospital. A provincial big shot probably needs a routine medical procedure. He expects a five-star treatment and immediate action. He also wants the procedure to be done by the chief surgeon, a university professor, but the latter left for a scientific meeting. The next best choice for him is a local medical doctor. But the procedure can only be performed by a young surgeon, who commutes every week from Vienna. One of the funny moments of the film happens, when the politician asks the second doctor on the team, if at least she comes from Carinthia. (Owing to a complicated history, and its exploitation by local politicians, Carinthians were - until recently - often wary of outsiders. This movie suggests that even people coming from the cosmopolitan Austrian capital, Vienna, were treated as outsiders.)

The two lines of the story join when the medical team faces a terrible dilemma that does not seem to go away: Do you try to save the life of a person, if, in the very slim chance of success, this person will almost certainly be totally handicapped and a burden to others? To make matters worse, members of the team have completely opposing views.
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4/10
May have worked better at half the runtime
Horst_In_Translation16 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The award-winning "Das Wunder von Kärnten" or "The Miracle of Carinthia" or "A Day for a Miracle" is a German/Austrian co-production that resulted in this 90-minute movie from 2011, so it had its 5th anniversary last year. The director is Andreas Prochaska, one of Austria's most known right now, and the consequence is that the supporting cast is predominantly Austrian too. But lead actor Ken Duken is German of course and his co-lead here is Julia Koschitz. This story here is based on real events, which is probably the main reason to see it. It is the story of a young girl who has a terrible accident and is in danger of losing her life, but the doctors manage to give it back to her as the title already tells us being a major spoiler. And honestly the way to this positive outcome was not depicted well enough, which is a bit disappointing as both writers are quite experienced. And the predictability here is a major problem as all other components except the question if she is going to live or not are pretty forgettable. This refers to the personal relationships and private lives of the people working at the hospital as well as to the business decisions and interactions because after all even a hospital is an enterprise. Anyway, this lack of truly interesting aspects is the main reason why I think (like I wrote in the title) that a 45-minute film would have been enough. Then again, I am slightly biased as I am neither a great Duken nor Prochaska fan and I usually like Koschitz also more than I did here. The eventual outcome is a pretty forgettable hospital drama that, in my opinion, is far too long for its own good. I don#t recommend checking it out. Thumbs down.
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