REVIEW: "Coda" lets deaf culture sing đ¤
Happy Thursday! Todayâs recommendation is for Coda, a new drama streaming on Apple TV+. The review below is adapted from my review of the filmâs premiere at this yearâs 2021 Sundance Film Festival in January.
Like (or hate) the movie? Let me know! Have a terrific and safe weekend. With love â¤ď¸, Karl.
âą 15-second review: Coda breaks from the classic melodramatic dramedy trappings to deliver one of the best musings on what itâs like to be deaf in a hearing world â especially for a mixed-hearing family. Itâs not only a feel-good movie. You feel â and experience first hand â everything the family goes through. Coda doesnât beg for your sympathy. It asks for your empathy. And youâre rewarded with laughter, joy, and togetherness.
Coda may feel like a story youâve seen before, but trust me when I say you havenât seen anything like it yet. Coda premiered in the U.S. dramatic competition section of the virtual 2021 Sundance Film Festival, the second film of writer and director Sian Heder to premiere at the fest, and will likely be one of the yearâs success stories.
You know the setup. Ruby (Emilia Jones â get to know this name), an angsty and picked-on teen, struggles her way through her senior year of high school. She is ostracized from her classmates mostly because her family is poor and runs a fishing business, however the fact that sheâs the only hearing member of a deaf family also plays into the torment.Â
As you could imagine, she feels a weight of obligation to help her father Leo (Daniel Durant) and older brother Frank (Troy Kotsur) with the business, and her mother Jackie (Oscar winner Marlee Matlin) doesnât help ease the stress either. However, she does it out of love for her family, which other than being culturally deaf are completely happy.
Knowing her crush Miles (Sing Streetâs Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) is joining the choir, Ruby makes a rash decision to also join. However, as we see in moments of privacy, Ruby can sing â like really sing. As the movie progresses, her choir teacher Bernardo Villalobos (Eugenio Derbez), offers to train her to audition for music school. Of course, though, she keeps it from her family for fear of disappointing them.
You know the plot. You can tell me what you think is going to happen and Iâll probably tell you youâre right. However, there are moments where Coda breaks from the genre trappings to deliver one of the best musings on what itâs like to be deaf in a hearing world.
Itâs made even better by the fact that every hearing impaired character is played by a hearing impaired actor.
When Rubyâs parents watch her perform for the first time, we hear the song for the first few moments â and then silence. Weâre in her parentsâ heads. We canât hear what she sounds like, which is anxiety-inducing for them. However, they begin to look around. The gift of observation that those that are deaf have allowed them to see what the music is doing to the audience so that even though they canât hear her they know that she has something.
Coda benefits from its deep exploration of every character, each of whom is made of pure charm and delight. We get to spend a little time with each of them to understand exactly why they make the decisions they make, the struggles that they fight through â exploring the minutiae of being culturally deaf. However, itâs explored with joy and laughter making the distinct effort to not other their experience together as a family.
Itâs not only a feel-good movie. You feel â and experience first hand â everything. Coda doesnât beg for your sympathy. It asks for your empath.
Coda never strays to the melodrama. Every moment feels earned and grounded in something real thanks to the strong performances from the entire cast. However, if there is a breakout this year at Sundance, it is Emilia Jones. She pours with emotion at every point often slipping in and out of signing that is wracked with emotion. If Coda is about anything, itâs about the joys we find through adversity. And though that adversity might shape us, it doesnât define us.
đ˝Â P.S. You can see every movie Iâve ever recommended right here.
đ
 Iâm also a Tomatometer-approved critic on Rotten Tomatoes! You can find new movie reviews here and here.