Terminal
Terminal
| 12 February 1996 (USA)
Terminal Trailers

A hospital in need of funds announces a cure for a form of brain cancer, having saved several wealthy men's lives. When a young girl with the cancer dies, one doctor notices that she and all the cured men had been treated with exactly the same medicine. Investigating further, she uncovers a plot by the administration to locate wealthy men already suffering from a serious condition, and give them the cancer, which can then be treated successfully.

Reviews
ada the leading man is my tpye
AniInterview Sorry, this movie sucks
BroadcastChic Excellent, a Must See
Married Baby Just intense enough to provide a much-needed diversion, just lightweight enough to make you forget about it soon after it’s over. It’s not exactly “good,” per se, but it does what it sets out to do in terms of putting us on edge, which makes it … successful?
ianlouisiana By that frame of reference "Robin Cook's Terminal" (jokes on a postcard please) is a Tuesday midday kind of movie."Five U.S.A." showed it the other afternoon without bothering to mention that it was in fact made for TV although that became obvious quite early on when I realised nobody I had ever heard of was in it and none of them could act for toffee. Set in a hospital full of people looking grimly at CCTV screens and computer terminals but spending very little time looking after their patient,a little girl apparently suffering from a brain tumour whom they inject with cancer cells then appear surprised when she dies. Into this maelstrom steps handsome researcher Dr O'Grady who,shrewd fellow that he is,soon begins to suspect that something may be amiss. That this preposterous story was written by the Robin Cook who wrote "The French Connection" is hard to absorb.Perhaps it was our Robin Cook,former Foreign Secretary and philanderer,it's certainly the sort of nonsense that could have originated in the House of Commons. The dragged -out denouement will surprise nor thrill anyone,the Bad Guy, nostrils flaring,fails to kill Dr O'Grady and falls to his death over the Reichenbach Falls - no,sorry,over the iron railings several feet onto the floor of wherever they were fighting - I'd lost interest by then. I wish I'd watched "The Weakest Link" instead.
Philip Van der Veken Calling this movie mediocre would still be too flattering for this ordinary B-movie. This is an uninspired hospital drama / would-be thriller that didn't convince me once. It felt more like a bad soap opera with unknown or at least not very famous actors who didn't do much effort to raise the quality of this movie with their talents. It's about a hospital where a cure against a certain kind of brain cancer has been developed. The hospital's only problem is that the government no longer wants to subsidize the project and that they will soon need a lot of money. But no problem, they have found a solution: they will cure CEO's and owners from big companies from a brain tumor. After being cured they will feel obliged to donate a lot of money to the hospital, ensuring the further existence of the project. There are only two problems: some people know too much and need to be put out of the way. The other problem is that the patients don't have a brain tumor at all, so some nurses and doctors inject a virus which will start the growth of the brain tumors, which than can be cured with their product...The story on itself isn't already the best in the history of cinema, but OK, I can still live with that. The main problem I had with this movie is the way hospitals, researchers, doctors, the medical staffs,... are portrayed. It's true that they would do a lot for some extra money, but they would never try to kill people. Another thing that bothers me so much is the message at the end of the movie. It was something like: the medical world does everything to find a cure for cancer but all they have found until now is a way to kill people with it... Let's be honest: everybody knows it isn't easy to find a cure for cancer. In the near future they might find something, but it will still take a lot of time. The main problem with this kind of movies is that it will not be seen by doctors and researchers in the first place, but by ordinary people. Not everybody has the knowledge of a doctor and a lot of people are easy to influence. Some of them, and perhaps cancer patients in particular, might think they are better off without medical care because doctors only want to kill them. This may sound like I take this personal and in a way I do. I don't like to see an attack like this one on these people. I'm not a doctor and I don't know much about science, but what I do know is that they did everything they could to cure my father from cancer. They failed, but at least they did their best. I'm not sure of course, but if I have to categorize the group of people who would like this movie, than I would say the same public that loves to watch soap opera's. I guess that must be housewives in their 40's and 50's. No problem with soap opera's but too many people believe that what happens in it is real and I'm afraid the same will happen with this movie. I don't recommend the movie to anybody, but if I have to put a score on it, than I would say 3/10.