Nonprofit to screen film with insights into their work | Peninsula Daily News

By Elijah Sussman

Nonprofit to screen film with insights into their work | Peninsula Daily News

PORT TOWNSEND -- Olympic Neighbors will partner with the Port Townsend Film Festival on Wednesday to screen "Peanut Butter Falcon," a 2019 film about a friendship between two struggling young men.

In addition to the value the movie brings in terms of disability representation, Claudia Coppola, executive director of Olympic Neighbors, said she chose the movie because she likes it as a movie.

"I think it's artistically well done and interesting," she said. "I think that there are a lot of really great documentaries and movies about people with disabilities. Some do a much better job of explaining different types of disabilities and different types of support, but I wanted to pick something out that would highlight our services but also just engage people and be interesting to watch and start the conversation that way."

In the film, Zak, portrayed by Zack Gottsagen, who has Down syndrome, runs away from a senior living center because he was unhappy there. Tyler is grieving his brother's death and feeling some responsibility for it.

The two become entangled and form a meaningful relationship, providing each other emotional support as they escape through the rural countryside of North Carolina.

Along with the screening, there will be a discussion following the film. The screening will be at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Balcony Theatre, 211 Taylor St., Suite 401A.

Tickets are $10 and can be purchased at https://www.ptfilmfest.com/events.

The film has an approval rating of 95 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and is "certified fresh" on the site.

Olympic Neighbors is a Port Townsend-based nonprofit dedicated to helping people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) live good and full lives in their community. The organization provides affordable rent and 24-hour care for up to six adults with IDD in Port Townsend.

A normal home, in a normal neighborhood, the home is classified as an Adult Family Home and licensed by the state Department of Social and Health Services.

"They really see the house as their home," Coppola said. "They see the roommates as their family. As you can imagine, with six adults living together, there can be some work to navigate. But for the most part, they feel like this is their place and this is where they belong."

Coppola said one of the things she likes about the movie is that one of the main characters has a developmental disability.

"That was really important to me, to have someone who lives that life portray that character, and also to show that a person with a developmental disability can do anything that a person without one can," she said. "They can be an actor in a big movie and memorize lines."

"Peanut Butter Falcon" also stars Shia Labeouf as Tyler and Dakota Johnson as Eleanor, an empathetic aid from Zak's senior living center, tasked with finding him.

Zak living in a senior living center is an accurate portrayal of what can happen to people with IDD, Coppola said, especially in Washington.

"Everyone should be living in the community, especially people with disabilities," Coppola said.

"Peanut Butter Falcon" is hard to categorize, it's a road-trip film, a buddy film, an escape film and one that brings representation to a mainstream audience without ever making it the focus.

"I like that, while it is a story about a person with disabilities, his disability isn't the whole story," Coppola said. "The same with how a person with an intellectual or developmental disability is more than just their disability, that's just a piece of who they are."

________

Reporter Elijah Sussman can be reached by email at [email protected].

Previous articleNext article

POPULAR CATEGORY

corporate

12813

tech

11464

entertainment

15995

research

7394

misc

16829

wellness

12912

athletics

16929