What do you do if your autistic son is unresponsive to treatment yet inexplicably soothed by the proximity of horses? If you are Rupert Isaacson and his wife, Kristin Neff, you take him to a country where horses are as essential as water: Mongolia.
The Horse Boy
Resolutely unvarnished (“I didn’t expect an urban slum,” Mr. Isaacson remarks on arriving in the capital city, Ulan Bator) and astonishingly intimate, The Horse Boy chronicles a couple in emotional and physical extremity. Though experts are on hand — including Dr. Simon Baron-Cohen, a Cambridge University psychologist and eerily look-alike cousin of the comedian Sacha — to tell us how little they know about autism, the film is not a primer on this heartbreaking condition. Instead it recounts a deeply personal, highly subjective and inarguably thought-provoking story of one family’s quest for a certain kind of peace.
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