Director: Sian Heder
This film is about a CODA, a high school girl, Ruby, who grows up with both mute parents and an elder brother who is also mute. This tightly-knitted family of four live by the coast. Father is a fisherman helped by his son, who dropped out of school early due to disability. Ruby juggles between school and helping her father on a fishing boat. The understanding is that Ruby is to help out in the family business after high school.
By chance, after joining the school choir club, when Ruby sees an attractive boy enter the club, she is discovered by her teacher to have hidden talents. Long story short, she is in a position to go to Berklee Music School. In the background, the fishing community is fighting the middle men's menace who impinge on their earnings. As the rest of the community is not well versed in sign language, Ruby is a valuable asset who can correctly voice out her father's great ideas. Ruby's absence also lands the father and son team in trouble due to their hearing impairment.
Marilee Martin, an Oscar winner, is said to be instrumental in ensuring the right cast |
Themes like these are not ground shattering. We have had this type of self-sacrificial coming-of-age story before. What makes this different is that, in keeping with frequent cries against cultural misappropriation, the filmmakers ensured real-life hearing-impaired actors. That itself is a recipe for an Academy Award nomination. Added with the emphasis on the family unit strength gives its contenders a run for its money.
Reminded me so much of Khamoshi
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