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"When Music Becomes Healing" 

In the opening moments of The Medicine (2024), director Sarah Dienaar captures a quiet but profound image: Leonie Bos walking alone through a forest landscape in the Netherlands. The bare trees stretch upward, the ground covered in autumn leaves, and Leonie pauses in silence as if in communion with her surroundings. It is an image that feels raw and unfiltered, a reminder that nature is not simply a backdrop for life but an active participant in it. This is where the documentary begins — an invitation to understand how Leonie’s music and her life are inseparably bound to nature, family, grief, and ultimately healing.
 

Sarah Dienaar’s film is more than a biographical portrait; it is a work of poetic observation. From the very first shots, it establishes its rhythm through contrasts: silence and song, stillness and movement, fragility and strength. The film’s title, The Medicine, proves not to be metaphorical hyperbole but a lived truth that Leonie embodies. Through the film’s forty minutes, music transforms from a profession into a salvation, and finally into a shared cure.

A Life Woven with Music and Loss

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What could have been the end of her path became instead a painful reset. Sarah Dienaar allows Leonie to recount these memories without melodrama, relying on her voiceovers and candid interviews to express the complexity of that period. There is no forced narrative arc; the story flows naturally, as though we are sitting with Leonie in conversation.

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The Director’s Sensitivity

This is where Sarah Dienaar’s role as director deserves emphasis. It takes more than a camera to shape such a vulnerable narrative; it takes patience, trust, and a sense of timing. The placement of Leonie’s reflections alongside carefully chosen archival footage shows remarkable restraint. Sarah Dienaar does not impose herself on the story. Instead, she guides the viewer with subtlety, letting Leonie’s words and music dictate the rhythm.

 

The seamlessness of this structure — past and present, personal and universal — speaks to the director’s skill. Reviewers on IMDb have already noted how the film’s “smooth flow” and “intimacy” set it apart from many music documentaries. These observations are accurate: Sarah Dienaar never reduces Leonie to a subject to be analyzed. She is, at every point, a human being allowed to breathe on screen.

Music as Growth

Some of the film’s most compelling sequences take place inside the recording studio. Here, we witness Leonie’s transformation. As she begins to sing, something shifts: the grief, the doubt, and the hesitation melt away, replaced by confidence and presence. The music expands her, allowing her to grow into something larger than herself.

This metamorphosis is not presented with dramatic lighting or cinematic tricks. Instead, the camera observes quietly, capturing the sincerity of the moment. The effect is powerful. We see an artist who becomes “giant,” as if the studio itself cannot contain her. It is in these scenes that The Medicine fully lives up to its name, showing music not just as art but as therapy, ritual, and rebirth.
 

Workshops and Community

Sarah Dienaar broadens the scope by including Leonie’s workshops. These sessions show the ripple effect of her music on others. Attendees arrive tense, distracted, or unsure. Through voice, sound, and guided exercises, Leonie brings them to a place of openness and relaxation. The transformation is visible. People smile, breathe deeper, and reconnect with themselves.

 


 

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Still from the documentary The Medicine (2024), directed by Sarah Dienaar. All rights reserved to the filmmaker.

Here the film demonstrates how Leonie’s journey is not only personal but communal. She is not simply healing herself through music; she is creating a shared medicine. Watching these workshops, one cannot help but feel the authenticity of her approach. There is no performance, no showmanship — just a quiet offering of what has already saved her.

Family, Nature, and the Body

Throughout the documentary, the themes of family and nature remain constant. Leonie’s love for her father is presented as a stabilizing force, a reminder that her art is never separate from her personal life. Scenes of forests, rivers, concerts and fields reinforce the connection between the external world and her internal state.

The body itself becomes an instrument, not only in performance but in healing. Leonie’s connection with breath and voice is mirrored by the physical presence of others in her workshops. The body is no longer simply a vessel — it becomes a medium of medicine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Director’s Achievement

It is important to underscore that all of this would not resonate without the meticulous work of the director. Sarah Dienaar has achieved something rare: she has made a music documentary that is both intimate and expansive, both personal and universal. The careful pacing, the integration of Leonie’s personal footage, the use of nature as a silent companion — these choices elevate the film beyond biography into something closer to visual poetry.

The final sequences, underscored by Leonie’s song Great Divine, leave us with a sense of closure and renewal. The lyrics — “I am finally coming back home” — carry both literal and metaphorical weight. Home is not just a place; it is a state of acceptance, healing, and self-recognition.
 

Conclusion

The Medicine is not a film about fame, charts, or industry accolades. It is about resilience, love, and the redemptive power of art. Through its 39 minutes, it reminds us that music is not merely entertainment — it is survival, it is therapy, and it is communion.


 

Still from the documentary The Medicine (2024), directed by Sarah Dienaar. All rights reserved to the filmmaker.

As viewers, we are not passive spectators. Sarah Dienaar’s lens invites us into Leonie’s world in such a way that her healing becomes contagious. By the end, we do not only admire Leonie’s courage; we feel part of the very movement she has created.
 

For those who have ever turned to music in moments of grief or joy, The Medicine will feel like recognition. For those new to Leonie Bos, it will feel like discovery. And for all of us, it will stand as a testament to what can happen when an artist dares to expose herself fully to the world and a director dares to capture it with honesty.

Sarah Dienaar’s has given us more than a documentary; she has given us a mirror of what it means to heal.


Disclaimer:
This review of The Medicine (2024), directed by Sarah Dienaar, is based on the official documentary, publicly available information (including IMDb and the artist’s website), It represents the personal editorial opinion of the author, Darwin Reina, and is not affiliated with or endorsed by the filmmakers or distributors.


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