The A.V. Club by Beatrice Loayza
It’s a blatantly didactic film, yet its focus on advocacy feels justified given the misconceptions that continue to dominate society’s understanding of the autism community.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United States, United Kingdom · 2020
1h 22m
Director Jerry Rothwell
Starring Jordan O'Donegan, David Mitchell, Donna Budway, Emma Budway
Genre Documentary
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
This immersive film explores the experiences of nonspeaking autistic people around the world.
The A.V. Club by Beatrice Loayza
It’s a blatantly didactic film, yet its focus on advocacy feels justified given the misconceptions that continue to dominate society’s understanding of the autism community.
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
The portraits are moving and informative. . . . As an aesthetic endeavor, though, The Reason I Jump is questionable, regardless of how much sensitivity the filmmakers took in their approach.
If Jerry Rothwell’s film version of The Reason I Jump is far more effective and self-possessed than most documentary adaptations of “memoirs” tend to be, that’s largely because it sees Higashida’s book as a lens instead of as a subject, and refracts various other people through it in recognition of the rare tale that’s less important than how it’s translated.
The film weaves together the stories of five mostly nonverbal autistic teens to present a rich tapestry of the autistic experience.
Screen Daily by Fionnuala Halligan
Care and respect is evident. Camerawork is beautiful, but in the service of the piece, not beauty itself. Sound design is enveloping, and together they convey worlds of light and water, of the humming from electricity that can travel for miles and of a range of emotions from anxiety to shame that run deeper and more vividly than it seems we can possibly understand.
Nimbly switching between different lenses and sonic streams, Rothwell invites viewers inside the psychological isolation and overwhelming sensory awareness felt by people at various points on the spectrum, as well as cathartic breakthroughs in expression and connection with others.
While The Reason I Jump is a profound and moving experience, one that isn’t easy to forget, it’s most effective when operating as an experimental work, taking a unique and lyrical approach to a subject that has often focused on the relationships and social struggles its subjects feel.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Crust
It’s a profound, immersive lesson in empathy that should resonate with anyone interested in neurodiversity or simply seeking a more inclusive society.
The Hollywood Reporter by Leslie Felperin
Aptly enough, it's a work that enlightens and informs but that is also ravishing to behold.
Austin Chronicle by Marjorie Baumgarten
The Reason I Jump will be revelatory for viewers who know little about the subject, and affirmative for caregivers and parents of children on the autism spectrum. What everyone, however, can take away from the film is the knowledge that just because someone is unexpressive, it doesn’t mean they are without thoughts and ideas; and just because someone’s bodily motions may appear odd and eccentric, it doesn’t mean they are possessed or unmanageable.
15 years of imprisonment, 5 days of vengeance...
In 2031, the passengers aboard the Snowpiercer are the only survivors on Earth.
She’s everything. He’s just Ken.
A failed stand-up comedian is driven insane, turning to a life of crime in chaos in Gotham City.
Packed with stunts, this adrenaline-filled first installment marks the thrilling conclusion to Ethan Hunt's story in a two-part movie experience.
An unexpected encounter gives a haunted young woman the chance to get revenge…
It's only a matter of time.