Therefore, Bobby spends a long time spending a long time preparing and remembering all the sentences that he wants to use in his head, and can speed up the process by quickly associating what he wants to say with his scribener will do so. Over time, as time went on, Bobby learned technology very well so that he could complete the word in three minutes. Although Bobby had to endure difficulties, he eventually wrote an autobiography of 140 pages called "diving bell and butterfly". In his autobiography Bobby explained his life before and after a stroke and reflected his personal experience as a victim of Rockin 'syndrome.
Jean-Dominique Bauby, the real theme of the diving bell and butterfly, was "locked" for the stroke. And the director Julian Schnabel did a wonderful job of locking me and him. In addition to his ability to lick one eye, Bobby marveled, and during the first one third of the movie the camera can only see the world from the perspective of being trapped and tormented. This is not a fantasy skill, it is a transfer of creative responsibility. Most of the biography about extreme physical disability places the weight of the speech on the actor (please think of Daniel Day - Lewis on my left leg), the diving watch burdens the camera and put it on it It also expanded to the audience. Shunabel eventually expanded his palette - he used flashback, fantasy sequences and the Bobby (Matthew Amarick) scene from the caretaker's point of view. But the real victory of this movie is that we have never really left Bobby's head. The diving watch is a shocking experience from the back.
Foreword: Jean-Dominique Bauby explained in detail the room at Burke Maritime Hospital Room 119 where he had a stroke one year after the lock-in syndrome. He remembered the days after that and the limits that resulted from it: left eyelid and blink. On the other hand, his idea was active, although he was interrupted by a nurse, he prepared the publisher's messenger to arrive. Prayer: Only two patients of Berck have locking syndrome. His situation is unique, as he maintains the ability to point his brain. He wants to improve his breathing, regain food without a tube of the stomach, and perhaps speak again. His friends and family worked on various religious and spiritual gods in the course of his healing.
This memoir is a series of autobiographical episodes created with Jean-Dominique Bauby, with the help of the publishing assistant Claude, published in July and August 1996 in two months. He left from Room 119 of the Naval Hospital in Berck-sur-Mer, France. Episodes do not obey chronological order, interwoven with memories of various eras in Bobby's life with his contemporary reality. On December 8, 1995, Bobby suffered a massive stroke and fell into a locking syndrome. Almost completely paralyzed, except for the limited ability to move the head, and the blink of the left eye. . Special characters are used according to the frequency command used by each French letter, and Booby's visitors (his various visitors, Claude and some hospital staff) read the letter and blink until the letters that Bobby wants I will wait to do it.