Filmmaker Sarah Tracton gives a totally fresh take on what it means to hear, to listen, when
she uses her own hearing loss as a catalyst to visually explore the texture of sound. White
Sound is recreated in the ‘mind’s ear.’

Filmmaker Sarah Tracton gives a totally fresh take on what it means to hear, to listen, when
she uses her own hearing loss as a catalyst to visually explore the texture of sound. White
Sound is recreated in the ‘mind’s ear.’
Twelve-year-old Itamar has a deep passion for ice skating. However, he is slowly
losing his hearing, and therefore his balance, forcing him away from his dream.
Itamar refuses to accept his doctor’s orders and his parents’ wish that he stay
away from the ice rink. Natalie, his new partner, who is a wild and disobedient
girl, decides to help him. Together they struggle and grow within a complicated
world of adolescence.
Four Iraq War veterans turn the nightmares of war into Olympic dreams. After
losing limbs and suffering paralysis fighting for their country in Iraq, they have set
out to do what many thought impossible? but will they make the cut?
Coming of age in an Ozark town. Enoch is a high school senior: he stutters, has one friend, Wheels, a kid with CP who’s in a wheelchair, and thinks about college in Tennessee on a baseball scholarship. He’s philosophical, loves poetry, and lives with his mom and grandfather. Life gets complicated when he finds himself attracted to Abby, one of the popular girls. When he starts hanging out with her, even though he wants Wheels along, in part to help him finish his sentences, it causes friction between the two friends and gives Enoch pause about whether he should «leave town to make something of himself.» Can he figure out what he wants without hurting anyone’s feelings?
Gabriel Belhassan is the next big thing in the rock music world, former Orthodox
Jew and recently diagnosed manic depressive. Upon being released from a
psychiatric facility, he begins work on a solo album, but urban solitude, disturbed
sleep, and a myriad of daily pressures refuse to let him be.
Steve Wampler, who has cerebral palsy, must do 20,000 pull-ups to climb the famous El
Capitan Mountain in Yosemite. In 2002, Steve founded a camp for kids with disabilities, and
his climb will be a testament that they can do anything they set their minds to.