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A still from "Every Last Child."
MOVIE REVIEW
Every Last Child
Running time: 83 minutes. Not rated (nothing offensive).
Grim but worthwhile, this documentary on the war against polio in Pakistan often recalls our own anti-vaxer movement, with needlessly sickened children the depressing commonality. The difference here is scope: As one of only three countries still grappling with polio outbreaks, Pakistan, home to 80 percent of cases, saw a public-health emergency declared just last year.
After the Taliban issued a ban on vaccinations in 2012, health workers became public targets: One of the film’s subjects is the relative of two women shot to death while administering polio drops. Another worker chillingly remarks, “If it’s my destiny to die here, so be it.”
Director Tom Roberts (“Alfred & Jakobine”) interweaves several subjects: a man crippled by polio as a child, a team of WHO workers struggling to rebrand the health campaign, and a paralyzed toddler being fitted for leg braces. Roberts also interviews vaccine opponents (all male), who rely on foreign mistrust, misconceptions and a preference for religion over modern medicine. That intractable position — buoyed by murderous fundamentalists — looms over the film, as well as the future of global health.
Pakistan fights to vaccinate ‘Every Last Child’ in new doc | New York Post