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The film tells the story of Craig Westover and his research on the link between MPR vaccine and autism. What is the name of this film? Many thanks!

2007-01-30 04:15:30 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Movies

1 answers

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Here are the summaries containing autism
"Only Human" (2005) {Make Me Normal (#1.1)}
at a state school for pupils with autism. This documentary follows the four


"Things You Taught Me, The" (2000)
Mayuko, a woman with autism, has a chance meeting with a a young


"West Wing, The" (1999) {The Stackhouse Filibuster (#2.17)}
surprise: he wants money added for autism research or he'll filibuster. Thinking


Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, The (2007)
is a young boy who suffers from Autism. Though he has a general understanding


God's Ears (2006)
is a boxer with a tireless opponent: autism. When he meets a dancer named Alexia,


House of Cards (1993)
her to see Jake, an expert in childhood autism. Jake attempts to bring Sally out of


Lili m'a dit (1997)
the soliloquy of a woman and the autism of a "man with a camera


Molly (1999)
makes a miraculous "recovery" from her autism when she begins to speak fluidly and to interact with her brother, caretakers, and the world, in general. Buck begins taking Molly to social events, like a production of Romeo and Juliet, a baseball game, and expensive dinners. However, after a few months, Molly's brain begins to reject the transplanted cells and she begins to "digress" into her former, autistic state. Both Molly and Buck must accept the eventual loss of Molly's "cure" and her regression to her previous autistic state. While Buck initially rejects Molly and sends her to another institution, in the final scene of the film, Buck accepts Molly's autism and vows to remain in Molly's life by


Mozart and the Whale (2005)
with Asperger's Syndrome, a form of autism, whose emotional dysfunctions threaten to sabotage their budding romance. Donald is a good-natured but hapless taxi driver with a love of birds and a superhuman knack for numbers. Like many AS sufferers, he likes patterns and routines. But when the beautiful but complicated Isabel joins the autism support group he leads, his life - and his heart - are turned upside down.A dramatic, romantic comedy inspired by the lives of two people with Asperger's Syndrome, a form of autism, whose emotional dysfunctions threaten


Normal People Scare Me (2006) (V)
person accounts of life and living with autism. Created by Taylor Cross, a 17 year old aspiring film maker with high functioning autism, Normal People Scare Me highlights 65 interviews conducted over the past two years by Cross, with interview subjects representing different levels of abilities on the autism spectrum. The film's interview subjects range in age from 9 to 57 years. Cross asks subjects questions such as "What does autism look like from your perspective? Do you like or not like being autistic?; What do you want to be when you grow up?; to Have you ever been teased? The courageous kids, teens and adults Taylor interviews offer powerful, poignant, and deeply moving insight to life and living behind the many faces and mysteries of autism. In one of Cross' most moving interviews, he connects with surfing champion, Izzy Paskowitz of Surfers Healing. Izzy is revealing in his honesty and perspective on raising his son, Isaiah who suffers from severe autism. Other interviews feature young aspiring artists, poets, actors, college students, and a quirky special ed. bus driver. These are among the fascinating subjects this film explores. Cindy and Janice are no exception. Both of these mothers have autism and have kids with autism. Four sets of siblings with autism are interviewed. Graham Nash provides narration in the film, and singer/songwriter, Taylor Dane sings film's theme song "Locked Inside of Me", written by Joey Travolta and Jeff Less. Cross' mother, Keri Bowers, a disabilities advocate, author, speaker and founder of PAUSE4kids a non-profit serving the developmentally disabled joins her son Taylor and Joey Travolta in the making of this film. The threesome continue to speak and share the upcoming feature film throughout the country. Panel discussion includes Q&A about the making of the film; alternative interventions for supports; and social and life skill training for those with autism in the dramatic and fine and musical


Reaching the Autistic Mind: An Educational Challenge (2002) (V)
Autism, a neurological disorder, affects as many as one in 150 children in the U.S., yet is the least funded of disabilities. By following six families with autistic children for three years, this film takes us inside the world of autism specifically at the Eden II School For Autistic Children and Adults, in Staten Island, New York. There, we gain unique access to children like Sarah, Aaron and Benjamin, triplets who all showed severely autistic symptoms at eighteen months. For years their mother, a speech pathologist, avoided seeking a diagnosis out of fear. When they were diagnosed finally, there was only one space immediately available at the Eden program. The triplets' parents chose to send Sarah. She has now transitioned back into a public school; she reads, talks, dances, practices karate and plays various instruments. The boys eventually were sent to Eden but lost two critical years. Today, at age thirteen, the boys are still severely impaired, but are happy, bright and learning. These individuals and the other autistic children in the film share moments of amazing clarity and uncanny perception with us. Their parents and teachers make a heart-breaking strong case for early intervention and Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA). Treatment has succeeded in moving some children past their diagnosis of autism


Refrigerator Mothers (2003) (TV)
mother whose child is diagnosed with autism, her life's purpose will soon become a


Shen hai (2005)
. Through Lao-Yao who suffers from autism, Ah Yu found herself tangled in a


Through the Eyes of Autism (2006) (V)
Through the eyes of Autism is a short film that shows an autistic child's world through visual imagery, music, sound effects, and text. This film uses different attributes of autism as chapters. The film is entirely


Today's Man (2006)
s Syndrome - a high functioning form of Autism. The film follows Nicky as he struggles

2007-01-30 05:38:03 · answer #1 · answered by hotdoggiegirl 5 · 0 1

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