
Hundreds of thousands of families in China are affected by autism. In a society with little understanding of developmental disabilities, parents face hostility, discrimination, and extreme financial hardship. Five-year-old Feng Jia Wei does not speak and is often violent; he does not seem even to recognize his parents. He has been rejected from the local schools, and his parents’ careers have been destroyed because of his constant need for care and attention. Facing what appears to be a hopeless future, they say that they would prefer to die peacefully together and are seriously considering suicide.
Pursuing their last remaining hope, they make the long journey from their North China home to Beijing, where a small school called Stars and Rain offers a program of behavioral techniques that might enable their son to make enough progress to be accepted in school. Founded in 1993 by the mother of an autistic boy, Stars and Rain has been forced to move four times because of neighbors' fears. It relies entirely on charitable donations and has rudimentary facilities, yet it has helped more than 1,000 families of autistic children and won support from an army of international volunteers. We follow the Feng Jiawei family through the eleven-week program, getting to know some of the other class members and parents along the way.
By the end of the program, Feng has learned 30 simple words, but has also achieved a more vital breakthrough when, for the first time, he looks into his mother's eyes and seems to recognize her. We see the parents begin to nurture brighter hopes for their future. For the first time, they have been embraced and felt the warmth of people who share and understand their pain. Yet now they must return to a suspicious community and continue the battle. Will their child’s progress be enough?
This is a film filled with moments of desperation, joy, devotion, and beautifully tender parental love. It provides moving insights into the hardships parents face when bringing up a developmentally disabled child in China, or perhaps in any developing nation, and reminds us painfully of conditions that prevailed in the United States not so very many years ago.
Breaking Down Barriers Int'l Film Festival, Moscow
Global Community International Film Festival, Toronto
We Care International Film Festival, New Delhi
San Diego Asian Film Festival
Kuala Lumpur International Film Festival
Independents' Film Festival
Columbus Int'l Film/Video Festival, Bronze Award
Sprout Film Festival