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Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead

  • 2010
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
9K
YOUR RATING
Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead (2010)
100 pounds overweight, loaded up on steroids and suffering from a debilitating autoimmune disease, Joe Cross is at the end of his rope and the end of his hope. Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead is a documentary that chronicles Joe's personal mission to regain his health
Play trailer2:42
2 Videos
15 Photos
Food DocumentaryDocumentary

Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead is an American documentary that chronicles Australian Joe Cross's 60-day journey across the United States, where he embarks on a juice-only fast in a quest to recl... Read allFat, Sick, and Nearly Dead is an American documentary that chronicles Australian Joe Cross's 60-day journey across the United States, where he embarks on a juice-only fast in a quest to reclaim his health.Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead is an American documentary that chronicles Australian Joe Cross's 60-day journey across the United States, where he embarks on a juice-only fast in a quest to reclaim his health.

  • Directors
    • Joe Cross
    • Kurt Engfehr
  • Writers
    • Joe Cross
    • Kurt Engfehr
    • Robert Mac
  • Stars
    • Joe Cross
    • Amy Badberg
    • Merv Cross
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Joe Cross
      • Kurt Engfehr
    • Writers
      • Joe Cross
      • Kurt Engfehr
      • Robert Mac
    • Stars
      • Joe Cross
      • Amy Badberg
      • Merv Cross
    • 33User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
    • 45Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead
    Trailer 2:42
    Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead
    Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead
    Trailer 2:43
    Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead
    Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead
    Trailer 2:43
    Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead

    Photos15

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    Top cast16

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    Joe Cross
    Joe Cross
    • Self
    Amy Badberg
    • Self - Doctor
    Merv Cross
    • Self - Joe's Father
    Virginia Cross
    • Self - Joe's Mother
    Joel Fuhrman
    • Self - Nutritionist
    Tammy Hamlin
    • Self - The Markey Health Food Store
    Stacy Kennedy
    • Self - Senior Clinical Nutritionist, Brigham & Women's Hospital
    Siong Norte
    • Self
    Terry Pennington
    Terry Pennington
    • Self - Owner of Terry's Gun and Pawn
    Ronald Penny
    • Self - Emeritus Professor of Medicine, University of NSW, Medical Director, Good Health Solutions
    • (as Prof. Ronald Penny)
    Mandy Reinking
    • Self - Hotel Staff
    Austin Staples
    • Self - Phil's Son
    Barry Staples
    • Self - Phil's Brother
    • (as Barry 'Bear' Staples)
    Phil Staples
    Phil Staples
    • Self
    William Staples
    • Self - Phil's Father
    Kit Willow
    • Self - Designer, Willow Fashion Group
    • (as Kit Willow Podgornik)
    • Directors
      • Joe Cross
      • Kurt Engfehr
    • Writers
      • Joe Cross
      • Kurt Engfehr
      • Robert Mac
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    7.59K
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    Featured reviews

    9essensual911

    Very inspirational

    For over 2 years, my dad has been drinking vegetable "smoothie" daily for breakfast with recipes recommended by Dr. Tom Wu from Taiwan. As a result he is healthier and looks younger. After watching this documentary, he was inspired and did 3 weeks purely on the smoothie (skin and all fiber included, not just the juice). Surprisingly, he now looks even younger and healthier. His psoriasis condition improves dramatically. So much that I am now trying this out for 10 days. I'm on day 5 now and my skin is glowing I barely need make-up in the morning. I also don't have the migraine which I usually have during my period. I like this documentary very much I am buying the DVD for others who want some inspirational boost to start their health journey.
    10spystyle

    SO fantastic !!!!!!!!! Gerson enthusiasts should enjoy it :)

    I've never written a review before, I am worried about the word limit :) Here goes : You've got to see this film if you are serious about turning your health around. I've been studying the "Gerson therapy", "Food Matters", "Jay Kordich" and "Andrew Saul" stuff, in an effort to get healthy and fit, and it's all a little overwhelming for me. This movie follows the same approach but does it in such a simple way, it's perfect! America is in a health crisis, and with health care's tremendous profit margin the trend will be to make us sicker and fatter each year. We are just dollars for them - society has us on the fast track to diabetes and obesity - not to mention smoking and prescription drugs - but we can take back our health :) Watch this movie, then go to their website and join in - reboot your health :) Also Google up the stuff I mentioned above. They all use juice like this.

    Good health and abundant energy, it's worth any price - but it's also surprisingly affordable.
    8JWJanneck

    Not a science lecture, but motivation and inspiration

    Movies about food and health are in season, many of them droning on about the Western diet, the benefits of proper food, the evils of the food industry and the modern life style, or any combination thereof. To be sure, all of that is quite right, and learning more about it can be educational and helpful in improving one's own dietary habits and consequently one's health.

    This film skips much of the science, which is dealt with only in short sketches and cartoons (and a look at the Web site suggests that it might be better that way, since the author's view of the science is cartoonish with a distinct New-Agey touch). Nutrition science isn't the topic here.

    Instead, we are being taken on the personal journeys of the author, Joe, and a couple of other characters who are 'recruited' on the way. And it is the power and realism of those stories that are the source of the impact of this movie. Joe's own story is impressive already --- as he literally slims before our eyes from pudgy to trim by drinking vegetable and fruit juice, it is difficult to imagine anyone struggling with their weight and health seeing this without getting at least interested in his approach. It might have ended there, and be a pretty good piece on the significant impact of your diet on your health, and how a shift of the food habits can have a decisive effect on someone's life in a relatively short period of time.

    But then there is the story of Phil, a very fat truck driver from Iowa, one of the folks Joe talks to on the road trip he undertakes during his juice fast. Halfway through the movie, we listen to Phil calling Joe to take him up on the offer to help him with his weight problem. Phil sounds desperate and depressed, he sounds like he is not expecting to make many more calls. Much of the second half of the movie is devoted to Phil's journey, from a very fat, socially isolated, depressed Iowa truck driver who could hardly walk, to a much thinner, much healthier-looking Phil who jogs, gives inspirational talks about nutrition to others, and helps his brother change his diet before the next heart attack becomes his last one, just as Joe helped him turn his fate around. That's just an incredible story, amazing to watch, and truly inspirational.

    Even if you don't have a weight problem, it's still a joy to see real people change their lives to the better on screen. However, if you do have a weight problem, and related health issues, and perhaps have come to believe that that's just the way you were built and nothing can change it, then this movie shows you otherwise. If Phil can do it, so can you. Do you have to do it the way Phil and Joe did? Probably not. Should you research the matter further? Definitely. Should you consult a physician? Probably. You may need to take a slightly different route, but this film shows that there is a path.
    7bkrauser-81-311064

    A Pithy Doc about Quick and Easy Solutions

    You know, I got to hand it to Joe Cross, the enthusiastic Australian stockbroker turned lifestyle guru who spearheaded this 97 minute infomercial. He instinctively knows that the best way to prime his audience is through personal stakes and dramatic results. Thus instead of going the sane, unsexy route of weening out of bad habits to slowly lose excess weight, Cross puts his body through a 60-day juice cleanse while driving across America, confronting ordinary citizens about their diets. Why; probably because its easier to hock his "Reboot with Joe" program to those looking for quick and easy solutions.

    It's easy to buy into it. The rotund sufferer of chronic urticaria we meet at the beginning of the film has the easy-going personality of a lazed step-father being asked for $20 bucks. Even as he looses the weight, he massages the soft sell with a canned genuineness and an easy to digest chipper attitude. "I was fat, and there was no one to blame but myself," he says in a moment of reflection. He liquefies his veggies and goes all in. "Don't taste half bad."

    As the film wears on, Joe faces off against the litany of excuses people have for eating what they eat. "I only got so long on this earth, I might as well enjoy it," is the common refrain though my personal favorite answer to the question, "why do you eat all this junk?" has to be, "Because I'm sixteen." Everyone in frame seems to know they're not doing the right thing. To Joe these people are addicted to food and lack the willpower to seek solutions. The solution in his eyes is of course a "reboot" that will reprogram the body to readily take in micronutrients and macronutrients. "If all the world's major religions fast, then they must be onto something."

    I'm no nutritionist so I'm not going to make any bold claims. Lest to say, there's probably more to a healthy lifestyle than Joe Cross's musings and a few choice doctors stating the obvious. This is where Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead gets into serious trouble. Thanks to clever editing, Cross's self-evident truisms seem to meld into doctor testimonials with no actual data to backup anything. Nowhere is this more evident than when Cross's third act guinea pig Phil Staples goes into the doctor's office with him and he prods the doctor with leading questions like, "What will happen if Phil continues to eat like he does?" and "Is Phil healthy enough to go on a fast?" Notice he never asks "Should he go on a fast."

    The film also ignores the social aspect of its project. Joe's example, as amazing as it looks on TV, probably has more to do with him being able to spend 60 days consuming less calories than Gwyneth Paltrow starring in a Calista Flockhart biopic. The rest of us, you know, have to work for a living and need the caloric intake to make sure we don't collapse on our wheelbarrows and in our cement mixers (I'm assuming my readership are interminably sarcastic bricklayers). We also often live in food deserts, suffer from malnutrition, succumb to social and peer-pressure such as indulging in a Fourth of July cookout etc. Yes, it's ultimately you choice but your choice is informed by the world around you. And if you need any further proof that a 60-day juice cleanse may not work for everyone, check out Phil's article, "I Was the Poster Boy for Weight Loss...Then I Gained 200 Pounds".

    Lack of data, lack of comprehensiveness and the nagging suspicion that you're being sold something you don't need, like a canister of turtle wax. That is Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead in a nutshell. The fact that it's so laser-focused on creating and maintaining a brand may just be its only saving grace because it least it doesn't have that far to fall. It simply wants to make what it does look great and I suppose it succeeds in those modest ends. It's ultimately a D+ doc; C- because I'm embarrassed to say I dusted off the old juicer after I saw it.
    9frivolousfate

    Incredible

    I kind of feel compelled to write a review for this movie. It is a must watch. It is truly inspirational. It is uplifting and offers actual answers.

    This is sort of 2 stories in 1 movie (documentary). The film starts out with Joe, an Australian who travels to the United States for a 60 day juice fast. The first 30 days he spends in New York and then proceeds to travel across country for the remaining 30 days. Along the way he talks to people about health and food. Along this travel Joe meets Phil, a truck driver who suffers from the same autoimmune disease as Joe. The second half of the film is about Phil's journey and decision to start fasting, making healthier life choice and exercising, with Joe's help.

    I have never been one to enjoy any show or film about weight loss, or eating healthier. I suppose part of that is that I've never been affected by it. I have no problem staying thin. I say this not to be arrogant, but to stress just how good this film is; the fact that this film actually caught my attention. I'll say it again, it was inspirational.

    It was also very entertaining. The story is put together well. It's well edited. Throughout the movie there are segments that are animated, and they are done very well, which adds more to the film in terms of entertainment; and not just for the sake of it. I'd highly recommend this movie to everyone, whether you are overweight or underweight or right on target. It's a must watch for anyone who has never thought about what they eat much, and also for those who already do. It's good for audiences alike I think.

    The only thing I might be weary of….at one point in the film they do suggest an average cost of doing this juice fast…to most it might seem quite reasonable, but for others, like myself, it does seem quite costly. I mean, it's more than I'm used to spending on food. But maybe I could cut down on other things. But I think it all comes down to motivation and desire.

    Who knows, I just might try this one day soon.

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
      Followed by Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead 2 (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Down Under
      Written by Colin Hay and Ronald Strykert

      Performed by Low Mass Tone

      Courtesy of Sony BMG Music Entertainment (Austrailia)

      By arrangement with Sony BMG Music Entertainment

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 1, 2014 (Netherlands)
    • Countries of origin
      • Australia
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Толстый, больной и почти мёртвый
    • Filming locations
      • Atlanta, Georgia, USA
    • Production companies
      • Us & Us Media
      • Faster Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • A$2,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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