Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Tess Dixon's avatar

I'm ashamed to admit we haven't seen any Paddington movies, though my littlest kid was bummed I didn't manage to bring her back a stuffed bear from that train station when I went to London. Maybe we'll rectify that tonight and make it a whole British-themed evening since we were already planning on going to a recently-opened fish and chips shop. The only imports that really matter to a 6yo! 🥔 (Just kidding, she also loves the Ministry of Silly Walks and Elton John)

Expand full comment
Richard Ashcroft's avatar

I watched the first episode of Ludwig and could get no further because of one sequence which reduced me to tears, which I am sure was not the attention. There’s a point in the story at which Ludwig has what is pretty clearly intended to be be an autistic meltdown. It’s rather well done, and all the better for not being labelled as such. We are not told, but rather shown, that Ludwig is autistic. I’m very much in favour of nuanced and sensitive portrayals of autism in all its infinite variety, especially when it’s treated as just a feature of the character rather than the Whole Point of the Drama (“look at us discussing the Issues!” <Alan Parker, Urban Warrior voice>). That made me cry because it felt true and resonated with me very much. The bit that made me angry and refuse to go on is that the story made the meltdown _useful_, enlightening, a direct route to the solution of the case, not available to the neurotypicals. An autistic meltdown is not useful, it is hell, and in the aftermath one doesn’t just sit down and solve a sudoku or a murder, one is capable of little more than curling up and recovering, which takes quite some time. It’s not a gift, it’s not a pathway to enlightenment, it’s a profoundly distressing experience and most definitely not a plot mechanism. <I may be overreacting>

Expand full comment
21 more comments...

No posts