A girl navigates life with two intellectually-disabled parents and an extended family that can't quite agree on the best way to help.A girl navigates life with two intellectually-disabled parents and an extended family that can't quite agree on the best way to help.A girl navigates life with two intellectually-disabled parents and an extended family that can't quite agree on the best way to help.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Kue Lawrence
- Riley
- (as Kue Kellyn Lawrence)
Clayton Royal Johnson
- Andy
- (as Clayton Johnson)
Featured reviews
10Maxax777
This was really good - just across the board good. And it's true - it's about a real family. It's very well done - we enjoyed it start to finish - but it does get better towards the end. Anyhow - excellent movie - amen. I hope more people review and bump up the ratings - because this is way better than it currently shows!!! It's sweet, it's fun, and again it's true - really enjoyed it. And that's about that. And now I'm rambling to hit my minimum character requirements - I really don't need to type 600 characters - to say whether or not I enjoyed a movie. But again - we really enjoyed this - lots of fun!
Wildflower, Matt Smukler's debut feature, follows Bea, a plainspoken teenager navigating life with neurodivergent parents. The film follows Bea's high-school drama, cheeky romance, and the struggles of her best friend and relatives. The film is inspired by Smukler's family and features a cast of distinctive characters. Kiernan Shipka leads an endearing cast in her animated portrayal of Bea, who lies comatose in a hospital bed, surrounded by worried family members. The film explores Bea's life from childhood to the recent past, narrated by her omniscient subconscious in VoiceOver. Bea's intra-family relations, resentments, and communication style are explored through flashbacks. Her feuding grandmothers Loretta and Peg, her neurotic aunt Joy, and her anxious husband Ben, are all involved in their bickering. Bea's parents, Sharon and Derek, are calm and collected, maintaining a steady faith that their daughter will wake up. Bea grew up hearing other adults describe her parents as "special," a euphemism for neurodivergent. Bea recounts how Sharon and Derek met, the rush of their marriage, and the thrill of her birth. However, everyone else, including Peg and Earl, struggle to trust their daughter to make her own decisions. Loretta, Derek's mother, harbors animus for Sharon's family but seems less fazed. There is an unacknowledged but suffocating assumption that the new parents simply can't do it. Wildflower is a film that reinterprets the experiences of disabled characters through the perspective of a child turned caretaker, Bea. The film follows Bea's journey from her early years in a mobile community to her senior year in Las Vegas, where she learns valuable lessons about her parents and their neurotypical lens.
Bea's early years are filled with adventure and freedom, but her exposure to life outside her immediate family leads to a decrease in her tolerance for Sharon and Derek. She reads their laid-back attitude as clumsy and finds their carefree approach frustrating. After a driving lesson goes wrong, Bea is sent to live with her aunt Joy and Ben, who teach her skills she missed out on but annoys her. Wildflower quickly moves on to Bea's senior year, where she hawks school raffle tickets with her best friend Mia, hoping to win a free trip to Disney. Her attitude changes, but she still has a renewed appreciation for her parents. The film gains momentum when it settles into Bea's recent past, chronicling her romance with Ethan, a fight with Mia, her guidance counselor's insistence on college application, and a petty feud with their high school's resident mean girl. The film highlights Bea's struggle to overcome her condescending relationship with her parents and everyone around her. When she starts to see them in the same light as the rest of the world, she overcompensates by turning herself into a caretaker, resurfacing childhood resentments and revealing hard-to-swallow truths. The film culminates in a tumultuous blow-up, but relationships are repaired, amends made, and Bea learns valuable lessons along the way.
Bea's early years are filled with adventure and freedom, but her exposure to life outside her immediate family leads to a decrease in her tolerance for Sharon and Derek. She reads their laid-back attitude as clumsy and finds their carefree approach frustrating. After a driving lesson goes wrong, Bea is sent to live with her aunt Joy and Ben, who teach her skills she missed out on but annoys her. Wildflower quickly moves on to Bea's senior year, where she hawks school raffle tickets with her best friend Mia, hoping to win a free trip to Disney. Her attitude changes, but she still has a renewed appreciation for her parents. The film gains momentum when it settles into Bea's recent past, chronicling her romance with Ethan, a fight with Mia, her guidance counselor's insistence on college application, and a petty feud with their high school's resident mean girl. The film highlights Bea's struggle to overcome her condescending relationship with her parents and everyone around her. When she starts to see them in the same light as the rest of the world, she overcompensates by turning herself into a caretaker, resurfacing childhood resentments and revealing hard-to-swallow truths. The film culminates in a tumultuous blow-up, but relationships are repaired, amends made, and Bea learns valuable lessons along the way.
Honestly I was surprised to see the rating on here, my friends and I thought this was a really sweet and enjoyable film. The cast works well together and there is consistent humour throughout. This is a heartwarming story about family, and if you're in the mood for a feel-good film I would recommend the watch!
It does contain some mature themes and language which means it's probably not best for young children, but I think the film handles these topics in a way that isn't gratuitous or inherently explicit. The film is not shying away from very real and human topics and I appreciate that they do not overly censor these issues, but at the same time it does not glorify them either. Wonderfully handled, tbh!
It does contain some mature themes and language which means it's probably not best for young children, but I think the film handles these topics in a way that isn't gratuitous or inherently explicit. The film is not shying away from very real and human topics and I appreciate that they do not overly censor these issues, but at the same time it does not glorify them either. Wonderfully handled, tbh!
This was another film I watched without knowing anything about it. The only star I knew from it was Jackie Weaver. It's a film about 2 people with learning disabilities who marry and have a baby, and the lives they all lead. Based on a true story.
It speaks volumes about the way our society sees each other. About what normal is and should be, and that just because you're seen to have a disability, doesn't mean you can't live a better life with someone considered not to have one.
There's a huge statement n here about people who wish to be what they consider to be normal and acceptable in society, and yet they seem to have the lives most flawed and unsatisfying.
It's beautifully written and flawlessly directed and I absolutely loved it.
Shipka who plays Bea absolutely rocks the role. I'll be looking for more from her. Dash Mihok and Samantha Hyde were way down the cast list and yet their performances were so strong throughout. Hyde was flawless.
Don't miss this.
It speaks volumes about the way our society sees each other. About what normal is and should be, and that just because you're seen to have a disability, doesn't mean you can't live a better life with someone considered not to have one.
There's a huge statement n here about people who wish to be what they consider to be normal and acceptable in society, and yet they seem to have the lives most flawed and unsatisfying.
It's beautifully written and flawlessly directed and I absolutely loved it.
Shipka who plays Bea absolutely rocks the role. I'll be looking for more from her. Dash Mihok and Samantha Hyde were way down the cast list and yet their performances were so strong throughout. Hyde was flawless.
Don't miss this.
We found this movie streaming on Prime.
Kiernan Shipka, about 21 during shooting, is the lead character, Bea Johnson, a senior in high school in southern California. When she was born her parents actually named her Bambi but she grew up being known simply as Bea.
She is very intelligent and very grounded, even participating in high school track. But she feels bound to home by her parents.
Her dad was a normal boy, but when he was 12 he suffered a head injury which the doctors claim arrested his mental development. So mentally and emotionally he was more like a preteen.
Her mother was actually mentally deficient from birth. The eventual mom and dad meet and being love at first sight get married in Las Vegas much to the consternation of the parents of the two.
Then Bea was born, when she is 10 she is taught to drive the truck "in case there is an emergency." As a teenager she almost serves as boss and caretaker of the family because her parents aren't always reliable.
There are several side stories, the mean girls at school, the counsellor who is encouraging her to apply to a good college but she doesn't know if she can leave, the cool kid at school who becomes her boyfriend. A few unexpected things happen.
All in all a very nice, meaningful, and entertaining movie. Kiernan Shipka is great in the role.
Kiernan Shipka, about 21 during shooting, is the lead character, Bea Johnson, a senior in high school in southern California. When she was born her parents actually named her Bambi but she grew up being known simply as Bea.
She is very intelligent and very grounded, even participating in high school track. But she feels bound to home by her parents.
Her dad was a normal boy, but when he was 12 he suffered a head injury which the doctors claim arrested his mental development. So mentally and emotionally he was more like a preteen.
Her mother was actually mentally deficient from birth. The eventual mom and dad meet and being love at first sight get married in Las Vegas much to the consternation of the parents of the two.
Then Bea was born, when she is 10 she is taught to drive the truck "in case there is an emergency." As a teenager she almost serves as boss and caretaker of the family because her parents aren't always reliable.
There are several side stories, the mean girls at school, the counsellor who is encouraging her to apply to a good college but she doesn't know if she can leave, the cool kid at school who becomes her boyfriend. A few unexpected things happen.
All in all a very nice, meaningful, and entertaining movie. Kiernan Shipka is great in the role.
Did you know
- TriviaThe filmmakers consulted disability representation activist Elaine Hall during development.
- Quotes
Bea Johnson: Dog is man's best friend, red lipstick is woman's.
- SoundtracksBambi
Written by Andrew Horowitz, Nana Kwabena, Nate Wonder, and Jidenna Mobisson
Performed by Jidenna
- How long is Wildflower?Powered by Alexa
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- Una Familia Extraordinaria
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 45m(105 min)
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