The March disTHIS film screening for Flesh & Blood, challenges audiences with the provocative tagline: "Who You Really Are Can Be Hard To Face." Flesh and Blood tells the story of a man whose world is turned upside down after discovering his birth parents are developmentally disabled.
Adopted at birth, Joe Broughton (Christopher Eccleston, of NBC's Heroes and BBC's immensely popular Doctor Who revival) is consumed by an obsessive desire to trace his birth parents after his daughter Marie is born.
When Joe discovers his mother and father were once patients at a mental hospital, and are unaware they have a child, everyone's world is transformed -- and not easily. For Joe and his wife Cath (Emma Cunniffe), the discovery is the beginning of a rollercoaster ride which challenges not only preconceptions about disability, but also Joe's sense of identity.
Eccleston is excellent in the lead role, and the script by Peter Bowker, who both won the Royal Television Society Awards for Flesh & Blood in 2003, are top notch. Bowker spent 12 years as a special education teacher before becoming a full-time writer and his experience with, and understanding of, disability serves the production well. Unlike any film disTHIS! has ever screened (or is even aware of) the film directly and sensitively addresses often ignored issues of identity and sexual intimacy among people with developmental disabilities.
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