IMDb
6.8 /10
45 votes

Documentary · 1994 · 1h 35min
In this unique approach to the autobiographical film format, director Stephen Dwoskin pieces together home movies shot by his parents in New York City, a video letter recorded during the 1990 Gulf War by filmmaker Robert Kramer, and raw footage filmed by Dwoskin himself. A veteran of the New York independent film scene of the 1960s, Dwoskin constructs a film poem in which the strong sentiment of his personal story—he was stricken by polio and eventually confined to a wheelchair—never overwhelms the beauty of the film’s distinct form.
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IMDb
6.8 /10
45 votes
Rotten Tomatoes
The tomato isn't ripe
Metacritic took the day off
TMDB
7.5 /10
3 votes
Letterboxd
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Weighted average
7.1/10