I’ve always liked Michael J. Fox and always will. I suspect most people feel the same way.
Review: In ‘Still,’ Michael J. Fox moving tells his story
I’ve always liked Michael J. Fox and always will. I suspect most people feel the same way.
That’s surely partly because, as Marty McFly in "Back to the Future” and Alex P. Keaton in "Family Ties," Fox was a fixture of so many childhoods. But there’s also a way that Fox remains forever boyish - a charming pipsqueak, a plucky kid with a touch less confidence than he lets on. His sheer geniality and universal appeal has remained indomitable, even in the face of a degenerative brain disorder.
"I’m a cockroach," Fox says in Davis Guggenheim’s glossy, entertaining and often affecting documentary, "Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie."
In Guggenheim’s film, Fox recounts his life, career and arduous battle with Parkinson’s disease, with which he was diagnosed at age 29. The documentary, debuting Friday on Apple TV+, does this through candid on-camera interviews with Fox along with narration read by the actor.