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Your 2015 Documentary of the Year: The Scientist

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Your 2015 Documentary of the Year: The Scientist

Revel in Raphael Mechoulam’s fascinating and unlikely journey of discovery spanning nearly half a century in “The Scientist” from Zach Klein and Y. Klinik Productions.

“As scientists, indeed, as intellectuals, we should try always to be skeptical.” — Raphael Mechoulam, Ph.D.

Just imagine: What if the cannabis plant and its astonishing range of healing properties had been suddenly discovered today in a remote forest? The find would send seismic shockwaves blasting through the scientific community overnight. The plant would immediately come under frantically intense study in every nation on Earth and the person who first identified the active compounds would be revered as an inspiring icon of medical science forever.

It’s been about 10,000 years since the plant’s discovery and the global scientific embrace of the humble and spectacularly versatile “miracle plant” has yet to transpire. But, at least, thanks to “The Scientist” from Zach Klein and Y. Klinik Productions, we still get to know in marvelous depth inspiring medical icon, Raphael Mechoulam — and to revel in his fascinating and unlikely journey of discovery spanning nearly half a century.

Klein’s 2009 debut film, “Prescribed Grass,” documented the stunning success of cannabis therapy so thoroughly, it prompted health officials in Israel to launch what is now the world’s largest state-sponsored medical cannabis program. He has followed up that effort with what should be regarded as the front-runner for 2015 Documentary of the Year. The Scientist is a compelling masterpiece that chronicles the life and times of famed Israeli biochemist Raphael Mechoulam, Ph.D., who is hailed as the “grandfather of cannabis research.”

Why cannabis?

Dr. Mechoulam explains it as a matter of convenience: “With a small budget, you have to pick a topic not already being pursued by any major research groups.”

Having done his doctoral dissertation on natural products related to biological problems, figuring out what makes cannabis work was a “natural” fit for him. He was, true to his word, skeptical of the wildly divergent claims made about the effects of cannabis but still decided to learn the truth.

First he identified the chemical structure of cannabidiol (CBD)  and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in 1963 and 1964, respectively. Then in 1988 came the next important discovery: our brains and bodies have specific receptors for cannabis molecules. Dr. Mechoulam’s team reasoned that if we have receptors, they couldn’t have evolved just to receive molecules from a single species of plant; we must make our own form cannabis internally. The hunt began for human-generated cannabis molecules and in 1992 the first was revealed: anandamide, regulator of the immune and nervous systems.

Two years later, Dr. Mechoulam’s fourth major discovery rocked the biomedical world: the endocannabinoid system. Astonishingly, every process in every cell of our bodies is mediated in some way by our own cannabinoids acting on receptors. And those receptors are also susceptible to activation by careful application of external cannabinoids from the cannabis plant.

Therein, hopefully, lies the future of medicine.

Why is this film important?

If enough of the right people see it and it inspires enough countries to legalize the plant, it could fundamentally transform the world in numerous, enormously positive ways — medical, agricultural, social and financial among them. There’s so much we don’t know about cannabis, our internal cannabinoid system and how they could potentially be the master keys to human health and disease.

Science could be on the brink of learning how to use our endocannabinoid system to finally gain the upper hand over illness in general. And all progress made toward that goal will be directly attributable to Dr. Mechoulam, making his story all the more significant. “The Scientist” will only keep getting more and more important as cannabis researchers like Dr. Mechoulam and the other trailblazing scientists we meet in the film continue to reveal the plant’s wonders and change the world of medicine. It should be viewed by everyone who cares about human health and well-being.

What’s it like watching “The Scientist”?

To watch this film is to feel vindicated. We’ve all been force-fed far more fear than facts about cannabis, but those who consume it have known the truth all along. We know from experience that it’s mostly innocuous. After consuming it, you can still walk, talk, dress yourself. It’s better for you than some substances that are legal, like tobacco, pharmaceutical drugs, even cola drinks. And now we find out that in many cases, the non-toxic veggie can also, conveniently, cure little kids of epilepsy and cancer.

To watch this film is to feel stirred. To wonder: why are this man and his team’s towering scientific achievements largely ignored by the western medical establishment, laws unchanged, suffering patients left without the natural medicine they need? What if more people knew that their entire body literally runs on cannabis — that without it they would not exist? Shouldn’t our farms be revitalized with this versatile, mega-cash crop? What if ordinary citizens could help the American entrepreneur cannabis farmer to finance farmland and equipment, through crowdsourcing?

To watch this film is to feel inspired – inspired to learn more, to share more, to feel better about suffering the stigma society has falsely linked to cannabis consumption. It frees those forced to hide in fear in order to obtain natural medicine for themselves or for their child to be inspired to do something about it.

To watch this film is to feel uplifted. The music and animation are pleasing, thoughtful, and appropriately unobtrusive. Dr. Mechoulam’s heart and humanity pour onto the screen in rich textures. And there is some transcendent camera work that captures a serendipitous, silent interaction between the scientist, onstage receiving an honorary doctorate and a family member in the audience: a cute little girl, smiling and waving and finally greeting him with a big hug. The spontaneous moment sparkles with a genuine warmth so authentic that it aches.

Dr. Mechoulam advises always being skeptical, so you’re advised to see for yourself. “The Scientist” will make you feel good, like a film about a man saving the world from ill health should.

Read more about “The Scientist” by ordering your subscription to Cannabis Now Magazine.

By Garyn Angel 

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