The Grown-Ups

82 min
Chile
Human rights Right to human dignity Rights of Persons with Disabilities

eng: for_whom

Journalists Activists / NGOs Students Pupils Teachers

The Grown-Ups

Anita, Rita, Ricardo and Andrés have been attending a school for children with Down syndrome for 40 years. After all this time, they are starting to tire of this safe, familiar environment. Now over 45 years old, some of them feel that working in the school bakery is no longer a challenge. They also yearn for freedom on a more personal level. Anita and Andrés are in love but still live with their families. They dream of finding a quiet place to be alone together, and they want to get married and raise a family. Sadly, the society they live in is not equipped to cater to their desire for more independence. In spite of the training they receive on becoming ‘responsible adults’, all four of them remain dependent on others to make decisions for them, much to their frustration.

Director

Maite Alberdi

is a Chilean director and producer. She studied Film and Aesthetics at the Universidad Católica de Chile. As a director she has developed a highly particular style that achieves an intimate portrayal of the characters she works with, through everyday stories in small-scale worlds. At IDFA in 2011 she premiered her first feature film The Lifeguard. Through Micromundo, her production company, she directed her film Tea Time which premiered at IDFA 2014.

Film poster
Films shorts
Films shorts
Films shorts

Дорослі It’s a very complicated topic to discuss, but we managed to talk everything through in a calm atmosphere and felt solidarity with the families and the people with Down syndrome themselves. This is very valuable. 

Expert of the Docudays UA film club at NGO Dream Workshop