From the daily archives:

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

The Sunshine Boy (Sólskinsdrengurinn)

The Sunshine Boy (Sólskinsdrengurinn) (Director: Friðrik Þór Friðriksson): Featuring nar­ra­tion by Kate Winslet and a soundtrack bursting with Sigur Rós and Björk tunes, this doc­u­mentary about a mother’s search for treat­ment for her aut­istic son will likely reach a wide audi­ence, and deservedly so. This still-misunderstood con­di­tion affects about 1 in every 150 births now, and seems to be on the rise. Margret Dagmar Ericsdottir was frus­trated at the lack of treat­ment options in her native Iceland and she decided to travel to America with film­maker Friðriksson in tow to doc­u­ment her search for altern­at­ives for her 11-year-old son Keli. She speaks to autism experts like Temple Grandin and Simon Baron-Cohen, but also visits with fam­ilies of aut­istic chil­dren who share their own suc­cesses and frus­tra­tions in coping with the condition.

Eventually, she finds her way to the HALO (Helping Autism through Learning and Outreach) pro­gram in Austin, Texas. The program’s tiny and tire­less founder, Soma Mukhopadhyay, has developed a tech­nique she calls the Rapid Prompting Method which allows non-verbal aut­istic kids to develop their com­mu­nic­a­tion skills quickly. The res­ults are impressive, and par­ents report being amazed to dis­cover their chil­dren already knew so much, but just couldn’t express their know­ledge. Eventually Keli is enrolled in Soma’s pro­gram and makes remark­able progress.

The decision to have Kate Winslet read Margret’s nar­ra­tion is under­stand­able, but in the end I don’t think it helps the film. Despite Winslet’s “name” value, the nar­ra­tion removes Margret slightly from her own story, and the scenes where she actu­ally does speak on camera have actu­ally been dubbed by Winslet. Her husband’s voice is also dubbed by an American voice actor, and these scenes really pulled me out of the story. Some scenes of the family shot in Iceland also sort of struck me as having the fla­vour of a tourist bro­chure, although it’s hard to point a camera in Iceland and not come up with spec­tac­ular images. But the end result was that at sev­eral times when I should have been more emo­tion­ally invested, some­thing pulled me out of the story.

Autism is a ser­ious con­di­tion that has been get­ting quite a bit of atten­tion from film­makers lately. The recent release of the similarly-named doc The Horse Boy (review) covers some of the same ground, although the treat­ment explored in that film was quite dif­ferent. (Strangely, though, that family lives quite near Austin, Texas as well, and must be aware of the HALO clinic). With the explo­sion in interest in autism, it’s lam­ent­able that some of the same experts end up saying the same things in sev­eral dif­ferent films. That being said, The Sunshine Boy will reach and edu­cate a whole new audi­ence, and if that helps fam­ilies who are coping with autism, then the film is a success.

Official site of the film

Here is the Q&A with dir­ector Friðrik Þór Friðriksson and pro­ducer Margret Dagmar Ericsdottir from after the screening:

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Duration: 10:54

The fol­lowing trailer was cre­ated before Kate Winslet’s nar­ra­tion was com­pleted, so there are a few subtitles.

7/10(7/10)

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