Does Night School Represent Students with Learning Disabilities?
Night School, directed by Malcolm D. Lee, stars Kevin Hart and
Tiffany Haddish. Hart plays a successful salesman who needs to get his GED in
order to get a corporate job.
On Wednesday, Andre Perry wrote
this article for The Root (and three
other platforms) titled, “Night
School Make the Grade in Depicting Adults With
Learning Disabilities.” He details that he watched the trailer,
and goes on to applaud the movie for representing “special needs,” and shedding
light on special education.
Admittedly, I have not seen the
movie. But watching the
trailer, just as Perry did, I did not get the sense that the point of Night School is to start a conversation.
Haddish’s character tells Hart that he is “clinically dumb,” and that there is
no cure for what he has. That was the end of that brief discussion of the
topic.
There are two criticisms I have of
Perry’s article. First, I think there it is dangerous to use blanket terms such
as “clinically dumb,” or “special needs” to describe all students with learning
disabilities. So, no, it is not representative of all students who struggle
with school because all disabilities and abilities are different. Second, no
cast members have a known disability (I tried to search if Hart does, but could
not find anything). If producers wanted to represent learning disabilities,
they should have casted actors to do so.
This is a really interesting commentary on an aspect of the movie that is definitely glossed-over. It seems like we are trying to accomplish a lot more representation for various groups in mainstream media, but it is all too often very superficially addressed, or stereotypically categorized. If "Night School" wants to address any kind of learning disability, they probably should have done some sort of outside learning on sensitivity.
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