
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
Born in Texas, thirty-four year-old Ami Ankilewitz was was diagnosed
as an infant with a rare form of muscular dystrophy and given six years to live. Now
living with his mother and surrounded by a circle of loving friends, Ami works as a 3-D
animator in Tel Aviv. Motivated by the heartache of an unrequited love, Ami sets out to
fulfill his lifes dreams to find Dr. Cordovan (the doctor who gave him
the original prognosis), reunite with his estranged brother Oscar in Texas, see America
with his friends and ride a Harley-Davidson. The result is a mostly heart-warming,
affectionate, and technically interesting documentary as road movie.
Amis disorder is a rare motor neuron disease known as spinal
muscular atrophy (SMA), and it affects the voluntary muscles. The disease especially
affects the proximal muscles (shoulders, hips, and back), and in Amis case, he has
been left with the ability to move the finger on one hand only. The body retains its
ability to feel sensations and the brain is not affected. Like many afflicted with CMA,
Ami is very bright and unusually sociable. Indeed, much of the film is a testament, in
director Menkins words, to Ami the "veritable friend magnet." Reflecting
the increasing (if still reluctant) degree of social acceptance of the disabled (in Israel
and the US), Ami is able to blossom in most ways as a complete, "regular" person
a far cry indeed from cinematic antecedents such as Jeffrey Merrick (The Elephant Man) or the
cantankerous quadriplegic Christy Brown (portrayed by Daniel Day Lewis in My
Left Foot)
39 Pounds of Love is frankly autobiographical and employs a
technically interesting and narratively useful tack of intersplicing Amis computer
animation (a boy blue bird who woos a yellow Tweedy-Pie-like girl bird) with home movies
and documentary footage. This permits an emotional and visual ventriloquism, expressing
what Ami desires romantically. He has fallen in love, in a classic patient-nurse bond,
with his most recent caretaker, Christina. After two years of being lovingly cared for,
and becoming acutely aware of her inability to respond to him in a romantic (but only
implicitly sexual) manner, he sends her away. Much of the road trip across America, and
Amis private story, involves his attempt to work through letting go of her. When
asked on camera when did he finally realize he is different, Ami replies, "when
Christina left."
The film takes as a given the loving and supportive circle of family
and friends Ami has surrounded himself with. The quest that takes him on the road deals
with bringing emotional completion with the doctor whose diagnosis would have
condemned him to an early death and with his brother Oscar in Dallas. Early on his
journey, when arriving at the Grand Canyon, Ami experiences a sudden bout of physical ill
health. Park rangers are summoned, an ambulance is suggested, but Ami refuses all,
including his best friend Asafs pleas, to give up the trip. (Everyone else is very
tired.) Ami seems to be very much The Poster Boy for himself, but not for the severely
disabled in general, even though this will easily, if erroneously, be read into the film.
Indeed, that is the one disquieting undercurrent of this documentary.
The man is truly remarkable for his ability to cope and thrive, and not
to have descended into an adulthood of anger and resentment. The problem is that victories
in the fight for dignity and equal treatment for the disabled so often turn on this
personal likeability factor. Physical disability usually extorts an additional price
the battle up from despair and isolating difference. Amis gift is not only
his undefeatable spirit, but his amiability, even his ability to charm all comers to give
him what he wants (except, of course, Christina). It is a rare genius who can transform
personal adversity to such an inspiring message.
- Les Wright