Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
Bollywood

New Toronto Film Fest Spotlights People With Disabilities, 'The Forgotten Group'

The Canadian Press, 11 May, 2016 12:47 PM
    TORONTO — When the Oscars diversity debate erupted earlier this year, filmmaker Jenni Gold noticed one minority group was conspicuously absent from the conversation.
     
    "They would talk about women, they would talk about ethnicity, they would talk about sexual preference — but they wouldn't talk about disability," says the writer-director.
     
    "It was like the forgotten group."
     
    Gold looks at the under-representation of people with disabilities and deaf people in media and onscreen in her star-packed documentary "CinemAbility," which is screening at Toronto's inaugural ReelAbilities Film Festival that runs Thursday through May 19.
     
    Billed as the first of its kind in Canada, the fest has films by, or about, the experiences of people with disabilities.
     
    The fest also has free family programs and is "accessible in every way," says artistic director Liviya Mendelsohn, noting all the venues are wheelchair accessible.
     
    The screenings will also have open captioning and be sensory friendly with lower sound and some light and space for people who process differently. Several films are also accompanied by audio description for those who are blind or low-vision.
     
    Panel discussions will be supplemented by American sign language and organizers are taking access requests individually to try to accommodate all.
     
    ReelAbilities got started at a Jewish community centre in New York in 2007 and has since grown to 13 cities in the U.S.
     
    Mendelsohn says the field of films available for such a fest is getting bigger.
     
    "The ReelAbilities national office in New York is now taking submissions and they're getting lots and lots of submissions each year," she says.
     
    "There's really a bit of a moment happening around disability and film."
     
    Of course, as Gold's film points out, there's still a long way to go.
     
    Featuring interviews with experts and stars including Jamie Foxx, Ben Affleck and Marlee Matlin, "CinemAbility" looks at how disability and people of other minority groups have been treated in the media and onscreen. It also examines the power the media has to influence society and society's understanding of any particular group.
     
    "The employment rate of people with disabilities is the worst of all, it's incredibly low, and we're talking about people that are capable of work," says Gold.
     
    "It's more looking at what someone can do and not pre-judging them about what they can't do because of what you think.... When you add people of different types to your work environment, it leads to a more rounded experience, new ideas. It's a better fabric."
     
    Gold has muscular dystrophy and uses a power wheelchair. She says she's had to overcome prejudices and create opportunities for herself in Hollywood.
     
    "As a female director, I also know that the numbers of female directors working are appallingly low as well — so when you add a female director who uses a wheelchair, you have to create your own avenues."
     
    Gold notes people with disabilities offer a special "artistic depth" in the entertainment world.
     
    "I tell people that I think I'm a better director because I have a disability," says the founder of Gold Pictures, who also does narrative feature films.
     
    "Growing up with muscular dystrophy, I couldn't always do something myself so I'd have to direct other people to do what I wanted. And what does a director do? They get actors to do what they want."
     
    Gold has an infectious sense of humour when talking about such issues and purposely injected that lighthearted approach into her film.
     
    On the misconception that someone with her condition might get tired on a film set, she quips: "I get tired less than everybody else because I'm sitting down all day. I'm not having to run around."
     
    She also notes with a laugh: "I tell them, 'I get to set at 12 miles an hour, my chair can. I get on set quicker.'"

    MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

    Shekhar Kapur To Take 'Paani' Overseas

    Shekhar Kapur To Take 'Paani' Overseas
    Filmmaker Shekhar Kapur, best known for his award-winning films like "Masoom", "Bandit Queen" and "Elizabeth", says to make "Paani" a reality, he has to take it somewhere else.

    Shekhar Kapur To Take 'Paani' Overseas

    Loved The Trailer Of 'Bajirao Mastani', Says Imtiaz Ali

    Loved The Trailer Of 'Bajirao Mastani', Says Imtiaz Ali
    Director Imtiaz Ali, whose "Tamasha" actress Deepika Padukone also features in "Bajirao Mastani", says he has immense respect for Sanjay Leela Bhansali, who has helmed the period drama.

    Loved The Trailer Of 'Bajirao Mastani', Says Imtiaz Ali

    Spirituality Is Strength Of India's Humanity: Kailash Kher

    Singer Kailash Kher, who has enthralled music aficionados the world over with his euphonious voice and meaningful lyrics, reflects upon the spiritual essence of India, saying the country's art and culture makes it different from the rest of world.

    Spirituality Is Strength Of India's Humanity: Kailash Kher

    'Bombay Velvet' Failure A 'Nightmare' For Anurag Kashyap

    Weighed down by the financial burden post the film, he says he has learnt his lesson about making films in a controlled budget.

    'Bombay Velvet' Failure A 'Nightmare' For Anurag Kashyap

    Pan Nalin To Host 'Angry Indian Goddesses' Screening For SRK

    Pan Nalin To Host 'Angry Indian Goddesses' Screening For SRK
    Pan Nalin is working on organising a special screening of his directorial "Angry Indian Goddesses" for Shah Rukh Khan. The filmmaker says he is "positive" that the superstar will love the film because "he is admired by billion goddesses across the world".

    Pan Nalin To Host 'Angry Indian Goddesses' Screening For SRK

    People Thought 'Bajirao Mastani' Will Never Happen: Sanjay Leela Bhansali

    People Thought 'Bajirao Mastani' Will Never Happen: Sanjay Leela Bhansali
    Filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali says people thought he'll never be able to make his ambitious project "Bajirao Mastani" -- a film that he planned to make for the past 12 years.

    People Thought 'Bajirao Mastani' Will Never Happen: Sanjay Leela Bhansali