Through amazing archival footage, shot by the journalism collective People’s Video Theater between 1970 and 1972, we see how these kids soak up their first sense of belonging. They tell us about the camp’s pecking order that puts “polios” on top and “CPs” (cerebral palsy) at the opposite end. Sex, drugs, and rock & roll all play a part, wheelchairs be damned. There’s even a camp-wide outbreak of crabs that’s played for cathartic laughs. Cheers to the buoyant touch of co-director and narrator LeBrecht, the charismatic hippie-haired teenager who became a significant camp leader.
It’s in the second half of the film that the filmmakers stay focused on Heumann and other camp attendees who turned their experiences into a national movement. At no moment do we forget that this victory for human rights is the product of kids from a free-wheeling social experiment that attendees saw even then as a utopia. Using their voices for demonstrations and protests, they helped pass 1990’s revolutionary Americans With Disabilities Act. This doc proves that they are still changing the world.
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