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Plot Summary
As autism has exploded into the public consciousness over the last 20 years, two opposing questions have been asked about the condition: is it a devastating sickness to be cured? Or is it a variation of the human brain -- just a different way to be human? After his son's diagnosis, filmmaker Todd Drezner visits the front lines of the autism wars. We meet the "recovery movement," which views autism as a tragic epidemic brought on by environmental toxins. Operating outside the boundaries of mainstream medicine, these parents, doctors, and therapists search for unconventional treatments that can "reverse" autism and restore their children to normal lives. We meet the 'neurodiversity' movement, which argues that autism should be accepted and autistic people supported. This group argues that the focus on treatments and cures causes the wider society to view autistic people as damaged and sick. Acceptance is the better way, but how do you practice acceptance of autism in a world where the very word can terrify parents? And we meet a too often ignored group: autistic adults. It's these adults who show just how tricky it is to judge an autistic person's life. Is an autistic woman who directs academic research about autism recovered? What if the same woman has trouble speaking and uses text-to-speech software to communicate? Is an autistic man who lives in his own apartment recovered? What if his mother must hire people to do his laundry and take him out in the evenings? This wide angle view of autism makes clear whatís at stake in the autism wars. Will we live in a world dominated by autism conferences where vendors hawk vitamins and hyperbaric chambers to parents desperate for a cure? Or will we provide the support that autistic adults need to lead the best lives they can? And can these two worlds possibly co-exist?
Customer Reviews
A Must-See for Anyone with a Relative on the Autism Spectrum
Loving Lampposts is a breakthrough film, the antidote to the usual scare stories about autism. By striving to understand the beautifully atypical mind of his son, Todd Drezner embarks on a journey of love and acceptance that thousands of parents will be taking with their kids in the coming years. The film also offers the fullest picture to date of the emerging neurodiversity movement and what it has to teach us all. If you have a relative on the spectrum or know anyone who does -- and nearly everyone does -- you must see this film.
A tender, smart, wryly funny exploration of autism
This beautifully and intelligently made film introduces a range of ways that autism has been experienced, diagnosed, treated, and accepted. It has the patience and the courage to go beyond soundbites and abstractions and instead to *explore* autism spectrum disorders and what the world is like both for people who have them and for people related to or spending time with those who have them. And it keeps viewers anchored in a number of specific real people's lives and experiences, drawing on extensive interviews with people from a variety of points on the autism spectrum. The film doesn't pretend that living with autism isn't complicated--but it does encourage us to rethink where the complications connected to autism *come from*, and it offers information and reassurance that may help viewers reach greater peace and curiosity--and less *fear*--with regards to autism. The film's tag line is, "If you've met one autistic person... you've met one autistic person," and writer/director/editor Todd Drezner models for us how to be open-minded seekers of greater understanding of the diversity of autistic people's experience. I genuinely loved this film and learned a great deal from it.
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