Dolphin Boy (ISRAELI FILM REVIEW)
Dolphin Boy
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Headline:
Traumatized Teen Cured by Unorthodox Red Sea
Rehab
The Godfather’s Luca Brasi will be
forever remembered as the mobster who sleeps with the fishes, but a mute Arab kid
may be just as deserving of cinematic immortality for recovering from his
condition after swimming with the dolphins. 17 year-old Morad had been left unable
to speak after suffering a brutal beatdown for sending a text message to a classmate
he had a crush on.
As Muslims, the young virgin’s overprotective
siblings had rationalized the vicious attack in the name of protecting their sister’s
honor. Fast forward a few months, and Morad’s doctors were on the verge of
giving up on any hope of his emerging from his semi-vegetative state, when a shrink
suggested an unorthodox, last ditch therapy just a couple days before the
patient was slated to be committed to a mental institution.
The experimental regimen called for
him to report for rehab on the Red Sea in Eilat,
Israel at a
reef teeming with bottlenose dolphins. At first, Morad sort of moped around on
the dock, but it wasn’t long before he got in the water where he was immediately
befriended by a pod of people-loving cetaceans.
Nourished by the support, he miraculously
recovered his ability to talk, although initially with no memory of the
terrifying event that had crippled him. Instead, he coped by creating a whole new
identity for himself as “Dolphin Boy.”
But gradually, what transpired the
night in question not only came back, but his critical testimony in court helped
put the perpetrators behind bars. So unfolds Dolphin boy, a visually-captivating,
feel-good documentary co-directed by Dani Menkin and Yonatan Nir that you just
have to see believe.
An astonishing tale of recovered voice and
memory depicting the most intriguing reason yet to save the whales.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
In Hebrew and Arabic with subtitles
Running time: 72 minutes
Distributor: Dragoman
Film Distribution
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