Article written by Lauredhel

Lauredhel is an Australian woman and mother with a disability. She blogs about social justice, reproductive justice, freedom from violence, the use and misuse of language, medical science, being disabled, her garden, and whatever else pops into her head.

Lauredhel also blogs at FWD/Forward (feminists with disabilities), scribbles at her personal dreamwidth journal Selective and Arbitrary, and co-moderates Hollaback Australia. She joined Hoyden About Town in 2007.

17 responses to “WARNING: “disability theme””

  1. Deus Ex Macintosh

    Maybe the problem was the use of actors with REAL disabilities, rather than able-bodied actors pretending they have disabilities.

    I was openly shocked to watch Children of a Lesser God on DVD and discover that actor Marlee Matlin is DEAF! We should have been warned before allowing our children to be exposed to a realistic portrayal of these crips having a normal life instead of the proper super-crip spin of appropriately fake performances by Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man and Tom Hanks’ “full retard” in Forest Gump… [yadda yadda yadda]

  2. Deus Ex Macintosh

    Sorry, both of those examples won Oscars so that should be “HALF retard”…

  3. Beppie

    WTF!? Who the hell thinks that disability in a movie needs to be warned against? I’ve seen privilege manifest itself in some pretty crazy ways, but this– just, GUH. What’s next? Warnings on movies that contain real live fat people?

  4. su

    And Daniel Day Lewis in My Left Foot Deus. In fact pretending to have a disability for the sake of the cameras elicits all sorts of oohs and aahs and “isn’t he clever” and nary a sign of a warning. This is just horrible.

  5. Grahame

    censorship is inherently stupid, so stupid things happen. At least this will do them good in the long run

  6. Grendel

    I think any guide book of ‘Pointless Warnings’ should include that one.

    Pathetic. At this rate they’ll shortly be issuing a sticker for our family car saying “Autism Onboard”

    Grendel’s last blog post..Sunday!!!

  7. su

    ?? Do who good?

    Just thinking more about DM’s point above – it is a sign of how deeply entrenched is the idea that the disability is the person when you hire able actors who then put most of their energy into (and receive the most attention and praise for) “acting disabled”.

    And yeah I think you have it exactly with “Super-crip spin”. It is the fact that disability (and braveness in face of, remarkable achievement in spite of blah de blah) is not the entire focus of the film that is probably so confronting. How dare they a) be actual people with disabilities ad b) not exist entirely for the education, wonderment and inspiration of able people.

  8. Deus Ex Macintosh

    LOL Grendel. As long as it’s not “psychopath behind wheel”. =8-)

  9. Mindy

    Looks like a brilliant fillum. I hope it gets released here. Why they felt the need to ‘warn’ people they would be watching people in wheelchairs I don’t know. Did they think people might walk out of the cinema or something?

  10. Janet

    Urgh words fail me. That is one of the stupidest things I’ve seen…

  11. Purrdence

    What next, warning labels on Torchwood because an openly queer man is portraying a queer character? Sheesh.

  12. I love the lines “Do you know what it’s like to be in a wheelchair?” [beat] “Yeah.”

    *sigh* I can’t even understand the logic. “We did it before and no one complained!”

    Ah well. Perhaps I can get that on a t-shirt. – “Sex references and disability theme” kinda sums up my life right there. ;)

  13. Ariane

    Whole new levels of stupid and offensive. And in a country that could actually use some more warnings.

    Warning: Excessive toilet humour
    Warning: Unrestrained BBC costume department

    And I sure there are many others that would be far more informative.

    Ariane’s last blog post..Closer and closer

  14. Rhiannon

    Hmmm…

    The BBC shows Something Special on CBeebies all the time, every day, (yes I am a bad mother and let my two year old watch telly most days), which features children with ranges of disability. Considering this, it makes no sense at all that they would have felt the need to warn viewers about disabled actors.

  15. Ruth

    More ideal warning notices, after Ariadne:

    Warning: this ‘comedy’ not actually funny

    Warning: stereotyping, cliches and lazy director involved

    Warning: conceived soley as a vehicle for *insert big-name star here*

    The BBFC should be ashamed of themselves.

  16. blue milk

    Kids, don’t look, some people are disability-ing, blatantly.

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