Sam Neill has handled his health journey with the kind of grace and dry humor that could only come from a man who has spent fifty years looking clearly at difficult things and finding, somewhere in the looking, something worth smiling about — the New Zealand actor who told the world about his stage three blood cancer diagnosis with a matter-of-factness that left everyone who read it simultaneously heartbroken and oddly comforted, as if the steadiness of the person receiving the news made the news itself slightly more bearable for everyone else.
He went through the treatment the way he has gone through everything in his remarkable life — without complaint, without performance, with the kind of quiet determination that his Jurassic Park fans always sensed beneath the warmth and the wit and the self-deprecating humor that made Dr. Alan Grant feel like someone you personally knew and would absolutely trust to get you safely through a dinosaur attack. He tended his New Zealand vineyard, he kept writing, he kept showing up, and he kept telling his story with an openness that turned his own difficult chapter into something that gave courage to the people following along from a distance. And then the news arrived — the news that the treatment had done what everyone was praying it would do, the news that his doctors delivered and that Sam Neill received with the particular disbelief of someone who had prepared themselves so thoroughly for every outcome except the best one that the best one took a moment to fully land — and what he said when it did, the way he told the world that he had come through the other side of something that had no business being survivable with the same lightness and the same humor and the same complete absence of self-importance that has always made him one of the most genuinely extraordinary human beings that Hollywood has ever accidentally produced.