Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Storyof the directors Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui present unpublished home recordings and material from the personal archives of the Reeve family, and show how the actor grew from an unknown to the hero of several generations.

Described as a friendly but individualistic person until before the accident, The film presents Reeve as someone who learned the true meaning of heroism and activism after the accident. leaving him paralyzed and dependent on a ventilator to breathe.

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The world premiere of this piece will be during the Sundance Film Festival, which takes place this year from January 18 to 25. This feature film opens the event in the city of Salt Lake City, Utah (United States).

Ettedgui, the screenwriter, spoke to the family of the New York actor, who died in 2004. The wife, Dana, and the children talk about how they lived after the horse’s fall in 1995 left Reeve unable to move from the neck down.

Just a year later he was at the Oscars and received a standing ovation.

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He managed to teach his son Will to ride a bike by following him from his motorized wheelchair. And he spent long hours talking to his family, something his career and interests previously didn’t give him time for.

It stemmed from his upbringing, as his father, a poet, did not approve of him working in cinema as acting meant theater for him.

The accident, the directors and family suggest, made the actor a better man, and he was aware of it.as his daughter Alexandra says, “He told what it means to be a hero… He is an ordinary person who survives despite the obstacles that come his way.”

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In this case, Reeve’s survival paid off. Together with his wife Dana, he founded a foundation that has raised millions of dollars for medical research. His whole family got involved.

Bonhote warns about this This is not a remake or demystification of Superman, but rather a look at disability.which society largely turns its back on, and Reeve’s role in reversing that reality.