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Children of a Lesser God
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Directed by Randa Haines.
Children of a Lesser God is a love story about a speech teacher who falls for a beautiful yet distant deaf girl in a small New England school for the deaf, and the obstacles that they face due to their differences. William Hurt plays James Leeds, a renegade teacher with an unconventional approach to education and a resume that includes stints as a bartender and a disk jockey. Upon his arrival, he is warned by school administrator Dr. Franklin (Philip Bosco) not to get creative with his instruction. Naturally, Leeds already has his mind set on his teaching plan and proceeds to play loud rock music in class in order to teach the students to feel the vibrations of the music and get them to try to speak phonetically. But a new element enters his life when he meets the attractive custodian, Sarah (Marlee Matlin). An exceptionally intelligent yet extremely bitter young woman, Sarah is a graduate of the school who has decided to remain there, in the confines of her world of silence; it's safer for her to be with her own "people" than to face what she perceives as a cruel and uncaring world. She hardly seems interested in James and will only communicate with him through signing, although she can read lips and even speak a little. James learns from Sarah's mother (Piper Laurie) that Sarah was sexually molested as a teenager; this explains why she is so wary of his attempts to form a relationship with her and why she is so full of fear. Eventually, James does get through to Sarah and the two fall in love, although both have to learn new ways to communicate their feelings. Though it seldom resembles the Mark Medoff play on which it was based, this directing debut from Randa Haines won an Best Actress Oscar for Matlin, for her first screen performance. ~ Don Kaye, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 Children of a Lesser God (1986)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Released: September 13, 1986 (Toronto)Director: Randa Haines*****With a title like Children of a Lesser God, you would think there would be some horror or gore splattered on the screen from the...wait for it...children of a lesser god. Shock of shocks, these children aren't murderous heathens but deaf. And it's a love story! Two plus hours of Marlee Matlin and William Hurt furiously signing at each other interspersed with snide comments from the principle and reasons why these two shouldn't be together.Let me just say it now: they shouldn't be. Why? There is no chemistry between them and, frankly, they don't much like each other. Hurt plays James Leeds, a new teacher at a school for the deaf; Matlin is former student turned janitor Sarah. While James can get most of his students to try to talk, he encounters Sarah, who steadfastly refuses to even try. This somehow attracts the two, leading to a passionate romance. But differences don't aways bring people together.Nominated ... " [More]
CinemaRianCinemaRian Children of a Lesser God (1986, ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Now here is a completely overrated and unfocused film that somehow got nominated for a lot of Oscars 1986, and won one, for Best Actress. Its one of those Oscar winners like Mrs. Miniver that seem important at the time, but history has mostly forgotten. Its probably best remembered now for the trivia question: who is the youngest actress ever to win a lead Oscar? The answer is Marlee Matlin, who at the age of 19 starred as Sarah Norman, a defiant, Deaf cleaning woman who falls in love with a hearing speech teacher. Although its easy to think that Matlin won on a sympathy vote (she is really Deaf), her performance is the best thing about the movie. She creates a likable tough cookie who refuses to learn to lip read or speak, arguing that Deaf culture is fine for her, even if it means working in a menial job. Why should she learn to speak, when she will never do it as well as someone who can hear? Unfortunately, the protagonist of the movie is not Sarah, but James Leeds (William Hurt ... " [More]
i-heart-arti-heart-art Read (or see) the play instead...
by i-heart-art in i-heart-art Blog
lost interest.
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"I am sure that it is because I didn't see this movie until last year, while studying ASL, and because we read the play before watching the film for class, but I strongly disliked this film - it completely misses the point of the play from which it is adapted. Furthermore, it is still quite controversial within the Deaf community that Marlee Matlin won an Oscar for portraying a Deaf woman that was fiercely proud of her deafness and did not want to be taught oralism (speaking and reading lips), then proceeded to voice her entire Oscar acceptance speech - she used no sign language. Both the film adaptation of this movie and the sadly ironic Oscar moment were slaps in the face to the Deaf community that I have come to care deeply for and with whom I sympathise. On the other hand, ignorance is bliss and I suppose that it could be an enjoyable film if one did not have knowledge of the Deaf community or the politcs therein. " [More]
 



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