![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Much as the original The Reason I Jump served as a vital bridge between two worlds of understanding, the film serves an approximation of this experience – the intensity of details, the overwhelming sensory palette of the outside world, the soothing repetition of reliable tics – in a warm, gentle, profoundly illuminating way. ![]() Using the memoir of 13-year-old autistic boy Naoki Higashida as a jumping off point, the film is a mix of direct address from the book, interviews with family members of autistic children around the world, and observant, patient sequences following the children as they go about their days in areas as far flung as Britain, India, Japan and Sierra Leone. In attempting to synthesize the way autistic and neurodivergent people might experience the world, the ambitious documentary The Reason I Jump is, in many moments, a sensory, visually stimulating experience.įan blades whir, sunlight refracts through a window, gravel jumps up under moving tyres, all intricately captured by filmmaker Jerry Rothwell. ![]()
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