Is There Anybody Out There?

Sundance 2023 Review: ‘Is There Anybody Out There?’ Documentary Asks For Disabled Everywhere

I don’t discuss it often, but I am disabled. Every year, when festival season rolls around, I try to make sure to support a fellow disabled artist. This year’s first choice was Ella Glendining’s documentary, Is There Anybody Out There? I wasn’t sure what to expect going in. Would it be inspiration porn? A sob story?

Is There Anybody Out There?

As it turned out, it was neither. Ella gives a nuanced, unabridged look at the life of a modern disabled person and a brief snippet of the media’s history portraying them. Born with a disability phenomenally rare to the point there are no current statistics regarding it, Ella seeks to find other people like her, and chronicles her own research and thoughts in this video-journal style doc. She visits surgeons to discuss straightening her legs and supporting her hips, accompanied by X-Ray visuals that were just as traumatizing as viewing my own from a spinal reconstruction.

Ella not only reaches out to fellow disabled people for their perspectives but those of the people around her, creating a heart-rendingly honest dialogue between them. I broke out in full tears during the scene where she asked her parents if they’d rather she be born more typical, as well as the one where she is reflecting with her friend about employment and the struggles there. While many countries’ laws claim it’s “illegal,” employers everywhere are still very discriminatory towards disabled employees, and there is a frequent struggle between staying employed and finding proper work.

A different type of body should not preclude that. There was a deep twinge of understanding and heartache when they discuss that after hundreds of applications, Ella was over the moon getting a Tesco night shift job. She is clearly a smart, capable, and hardworking woman, and again, modern society should be more accommodating.

As the film mentions, it’s impossible to fully understand what it’s like to be disabled until/unless you are, and I agree; having been able-bodied previously and become disabled rather than born into it. That said, Ella has created a wonderfully accessible documentary to try and bridge the gap between perspectives, ask unspoken questions, and hopefully move us towards a better future. A must-watch.

Author’s Note

*This review was originally published on the author’s Letterboxd, and is shared with full permission to PopHorror.

This review is part of our Sundance Film Festival 2023 coverage. We would like to say thank you for your continued support and coverage permission! 

About Chris Filipowicz

Born in small town Montana, Chris is a writer, artist, raccoon rehabilitator, and general supporter of disability rights and awareness. He loves film, especially horror, sci-fi, and animation; and has read comics since he was a child.

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