Heraldnet.com
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2010 2:34 pm
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Monday


Lynnwood woman knew area's stories long before ...
Everett rethinks boutique wineries
A tidy lawn could be law in Lynnwood
Sunday


Marysville family comes together amid devastati...
Monroe Correctional Complex to lessen security ...
Extra patrols will be watching for drunken driv...
Saturday


Olympics are in the air
Everett police officers cleared in 2008 shootin...
Edmonds woman leaves gift of millions
Friday


Budget squeeze may close beloved Trafton school
Endgame near on airport flight debate?
Aaron Reardon laments political sparring with c...
Thursday


4-car police pileup in Everett under investigation
Edmonds educator, famous announcer dies
Bill would suspend limits on tax hikes
Wednesday


Citizenship classes: All for a better life
Many Snohomish County kids haven't had second d...
Snohomish County jail thrives under sheriff's m...
Tuesday


Mukilteo kids’ cards help Haitians
County Council increases scrutiny on Reardon
Pentagon report a good sign for Everett's Navy ...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Entertainment   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Melanie Munk, Features Editor
munk@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Friday, November 6, 2009

'The Horse Boy': Documentary about autistic boy’s trek engaging

The personal documentary gets very intimate with “The Horse Boy,” an absorbing look at one couple’s novel response to their son’s autism.

As interesting as the movie is, many viewers can be forgiven for wondering where the line between intimacy and “too much information” exists.

The couple is Rupert Isaacson and Kristin Neff, world-traveling adventurers whose lives were knocked for a loop when their son, Rowan, was diagnosed as autistic.

We’re shown just enough of Rowan’s behavior — inexplicable marathon screaming sessions, his incontinence, his inability to connect — to convey the atmosphere in the family home.

Isaacson decides they’ll take the boy on a horseback excursion to Mongolia. Which must qualify as a nontraditional approach to medicine.

They pick Mongolia in part because of a rumored community of shamanic healers, but also because Rowan has displayed unprecedented calm and quiet when around horses.

“The Horse Boy” is a chronicle of that trip, with Isaacson as the gung-ho New Age believer and Neff as his somewhat more skeptical partner.

Cameraman/director Michael Orion Scott is also along, although there’s not much reference to him in the movie itself.

Anybody interested in alternative therapies will find this an intriguing journey and anybody interested in seeing a ground-level view of Mongolia will also respond.

But clearly the central focus is on how parents deal with an autistic child.

Experts chime in at times, noting that the spectrum of autism is broad and still mysterious; these folks include Simon Baron-Cohen, the Cambridge psychologist (who bears an amusing resemblance to his cousin, Sacha Baron Cohen), and the renowned professor Temple Grandin, herself autistic.

The wiggier notions of shamanic healing might be a lot to swallow, yet the openness of Isaacson and Neff extends to their sensitivity about Rowan’s autism, and the possibility that despite the hardships of living with it, Rowan might still be a remarkable person.

For these reasons, “The Horse Boy” is worth recommending.

There is a turn-off factor to the couple’s openness, however, especially since Rowan himself obviously has no say in how his story, with all its roughness and embarrassments, is going to be exposed on screen.

Is it brutal honesty or does it cross the line of exploitation? The sincerity of Isaacson and Neff leans toward the former conclusion, but the question should be dealt with more in the movie itself.

“The Horse Boy”

Intriguing documentary in which the parents of an unreachable autistic boy take him on a horseback trek in Mongolia, in an alternative attempt to unlock his mind. Questions about exploitation dog this film, but if you are convinced of the couple’s sincerity, it makes a case.

Rated: Not rated; probably PG-13 for language, subject matter

Showing: Varsity

COMMENTS | Be the first to comment

Log in or register to post a new comment.


To read other terms and conditions, click here

Other Advertisers
TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes

ADVERTISEMENT