‘CODA’ has loud message even when there’s silence
NEW YORK — The breakout hit of this year’s Sundance Film Festival is set to expand the conversation about diversity in Hollywood.
“CODA,” which stands for “Child of Deaf Adults,” invites viewers into a world many have never seen, with a silence they’ve never experienced. It depicts the life of a mostly deaf family whose love, friction, drama and laughter is the same as any other family, but communicated through sign language.
The movie, a remake of the award-winning 2014 French film “La Famille Bélier,” won the festival’s top audience and grand jury awards and set a Sundance record by selling to Apple for $25 million.
Written and directed by Sian Heder, it was shot in Gloucester, Massachusetts, during the summer of 2019. The movie follows Ruby, the only hearing person in her New England family, as she contemplates leaving their struggling fishing business — and her role as their interpreter — to pursue her own dreams at the Berklee College of Music. The family is forced to figure out how they’ll survive without her.