Aging Out
Closed CaptioningRoger Weisberg & Vanessa Roth
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Plot Summary
Artfully directed by award-winning filmmakers Roger Weisberg and Vanessa Roth, "Aging Out" chronicles the daunting obstacles that three young people in foster care encounter as they "age out" of the system and are suddenly on their own for the first time. Navigating the transition from adolescence to adulthood is challenging for even the most mature and privileged youth. For three teens in urban New York and Los Angeles, however, making the transition to independent living is considerably more difficult. Lacking family support, they are suddenly forced to fend for themselves with no job skills, meager financial resources, and little preparation to survive on their own. Following them as they become parents, battle drug addiction, cope with homelessness, and even end up in jail, Weisberg and Roth show how three teenagers use the resiliency they developed "in the system" to retake control of their lives. "Aging Out" is more than a dark chronicle of young people who move from foster care into the welfare, mental health, and criminal justice systems. This emotionally complex film is also a portrait of young adults struggling to overcome the scars of their troubled childhood in order to realize their dreams of independence and fulfillment.
Customer Reviews
Deeply Moving
The struggle of three young adults is heartrending. The terrible crippling that comes from having no sense of family, and therefore, safety, erodes each of their lives. They also suffer from deeper emotional problems that do not get the proper attention. Instead, they are shifted endlessly from foster home to group home. The filmmakers deserve much credit for eliciting such honest coverage of the kids and their foster parents and guardians. The film is worth watching. It provides a more authentic opportunity to grasp what it is to be forever without family, a unit most of us take for granted.
Exceptional
This was a wonderful film. Cinematography, music, editing - all outstanding, plus a great selection of adolescents to profile. The documentary was presented in a way that showed the human and heroic characteristics of the featured young adults as well as the case workers and foster parents supporting them. Certainly no fairytale ending, but an honest one. Left me wondering "how can I serve?"
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