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Showing posts with label the handicapped. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the handicapped. Show all posts

Nitzan Gilady's quiet Israeli heartbreaker, WEDDING DOLL, updates "Light in the Piazza"


The plight of -- let's toss political correctness to the wind here -- retarded, handicapped, or OK, "special" people, especially when these involve what in other films might be considered normal interactions with the rest of the world (love, sex, employment), is a subject we don't see tackled all that often in movies. When this is, we're more likely to get sentimentality than reality. If a film comes around that manages the latter, doing it righteously and well, attention will be paid.

This is exactly what Israeli writer/director Nitzan Gilady , shown at left, brings to the table with his new film WEDDING DOLL. In my headline I call the film heartbreaking, but this is not because it gives in to the sentimental. Instead, it breaks your heart via its clear-eyed view of the handicapped and what the people who care for them must do in order to help them achieve something approaching normality. I have no idea if the film at hand is based on real-life characters (nor does it matter much to me), but Mr. Gilady has chosen his people and situation so specifically and so well that it is difficult not to find them credible.

This film will take some of us older folk back to the time of The Light in the Piazza -- both the novel and the film. (TrustMovies never saw the Broadway musical but does not think much of its ditch-the-melody score.) Wedding Doll again finds a beautiful heroine with a limited mental capacity, seemingly due, as in the earlier work, to an accident rather than to anything genetic.

Our main character, Hagit, is played with enormous energy & believability regarding the kind of behavior that would accompany this state by the lovely young actress, Moran Rosenblatt (shown above and below). Were she not so beautiful, one might find it more difficult to believe the romantic attachment that has grown between Hagit and Omri, the son of the owner of the toilet paper factory where Hagit has worked for some time.

Yes, toilet paper -- which adds to the bizarre originality of the situation, and also allows some wonderfully creative dress designing by our talented heroine. Hagit may not possess all the skills needed for a more standard work life, but she has found a kind of mini-career for herself, in addition to her factory job, making tiny dolls and designing dresses that are always nuptial-themed, a circumstance much coveted by our girl.

As Omri is written (and played by the excellent Roy Assaf, above, left), with an unstable combination of intelligence, weakness and caring, this character keeps us -- and perhaps himself, as well -- guessing throughout as to his real intentions. Hagit's caretaker is her mom Sarah (performed with alternate anger and strength by Assi Levy, below and three photos above), who has given up a lot, including a marriage, to shelter her daughter. Some kind of "caretaker home" looms in the background as an alternative to mom, and while we understandably do not want this for Hagit, we can also see the upside of the possibility.

When Omri's dad decides to shutter his factory, this already fraught situation comes to a head. What happens and why is quite in keeping with the rest of Gilady's shifting but always understandable scenario. And the question of how and if the handicapped can somehow fit into what passes for normal society is explored with honesty and empathy.

From Strand Releasing and running just 82 minutes, Wedding Doll opens here in South Florida this Friday, June 17 at the Living Room Theatres, Boca Raton; MDC’s Tower Theatre and AMC Sunset Place 24, Miami; Cinema Paradiso, Hollywood; and the Movies of Lake Worth in Lake Worth and the Movies of Delray in Delray Beach. To view other forthcoming playdates, cities and theaters, click here (and then click on Screenings on the task bar midway down the page).
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Brazil's entry into this year's Oscar sweeps: Daniel Ribeiro's charming THE WAY HE LOOKS


Sweetness and charm can go a long way in making a movie a pleasurable experience, and those two qualities are in abundance in the very sweet and charming Brazilian high-school-rom-com-cum-the-handicapped-and-homosexual, THE WAY HE LOOKS (Hoje Eu Quero Voltar Sozinho), which turns out to be Brazil's entry into the 2014 Oscar sweepstakes. Written and directed by Daniel Ribeiro (shown below), from an earlier short film he made back in 2010, the film is an easy watch as it probes lightly but effectively into high school, the blind, and the lovelorn.

Mr. Ribeiro has a way with words and visuals, as well as with his actors, all of whom seem to be playing in that once-removed space in which they seem "real" but maybe not quite as real as would an actual group of high school kids. Everyone is "natural," though a bit bereft of the kind of specific behavior that distinguishes actual people. These kids seem to exist for the purpose of playing out the filmmaker's feel-good, "There's a lid for every pot" philosophy. And as long as you don't object too strenuously to this sort of thing, The Way He Looks should give you a very good time.

Our non-sighted hero, Leonardo (or just Leo, played by the gorgeous and so-believable-you'll-imagine-they-chose-a-blind-actor-to-play-the-role Ghilherme Lobo, above) is feeling held back by his overly cautious parents, who have probably over-supervised him throughout most of his life (the character was born blind). Teased by many of his peers at school, below, he has only one good friend,

a schoolmate named Giovana (played by Tess Amorim, below), and the two talk about kisses and love and what the future might possibly hold for them. Life rolls along pleasantly enough (except for those stupid school bullies), and Leo is even considering trying an foreign exchange program for the non-sighted) when...

...into the classroom strolls a new kid, Gabriel (Fabio Audi, below, left) with gorgeous, curly, black locks (which our hero of course cannot see, but we sure can), who takes an immediate shine to Leo and Giovana and before you can say three-way!, a friendship develops -- and maybe moves on to something more. But for whom to whom remains a question.

There a birthday party featuring spin-the-bottle, fights with parents, a class trip, swimming sessions, and even a shower scene, as relationships heat up. Along the way there are two particularly lovely scenes, one involving dad giving son his first shaving lesson, and another -- momentously romantic -- in which, when Gabriel leaves behind his jacket, Leo picks it up to inhale its perfume.

Moments and scenes like these go a long way toward making The Way He Looks an easy-going treat. The film, from Strand Releasing and running just 93 minutes, opens today, Friday, November 7, in New York City (at the Village East Cinema, in Los Angeles (at the Sundance Sunset Cinemas) and in several other cities across the country. It will expand to further cities in the weeks to come.
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