CMC Releases 2002 Movie Captioning Report
Editor: The Coalition for Movie Captioning (CMC) is working to
increase the availability of captioned movies throughout the US. Here is
their recent press release on the dismal state of movie captioning.
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WASHINGTON, DC From Thursday through Saturday of the big July 4, 2002
holiday weekend for moviegoers, captioned movies were shown on only 24
of the more than 34,000 movie theater screens in the U.S., and many
states did not have a single movie with captions showing in a theater.
This was one of the findings in a status report for year 2002 released
today by the national Coalition for Movie Captioning. The coalition's
goal is to make it possible for the nation's 28 million individuals who
are deaf, hard of hearing, and late-deafened to attend any showing of
any movie in any theater at any time, with equal access through high
quality captioning.
"Twelve years after the passage of the Americans with
Disabilities Act, which encouraged the captioning of movies, this is all
too common," said Cheryl Heppner, who chairs the coalition.
"Obviously encouragement has not been working."
There are two primary types of captioned movies in the U.S. Open
captioned movies make the dialogue and other audio information available
directly on the screen and can be shown in any theater. The second type,
Rear Window Captioning, can be seen by viewers who borrow special
equipment at a theater equipped with the system.
Only a limited number of copies of captioned movies are made
available, and they often arrive in theaters weeks or months after their
release. "Lord of the Rings: Two Towers" debuted with captions
January 17 in just five locations in the U.S. It was released on
December 18, 2002. "Spider-Man", "Austin Powers:
Goldmember", "XXX," "Santa Clause 2",
"Minority Report," "The Ring", "Mr.
Deeds", and "Sweet Home Alabama" are among the movies
grossing more than $100 million in 2002 that studios did not release
with open captions. "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" and "Die
Another Day", also on the $100 million list, are being released
with open captions this month.
The number of films available with Rear Window Captioning grew in
2002, but there were still less than 30 non-IMAX screens in the U.S.
showing first-run movies each week. Theaters outfitted with this
equipment did not always use it to make a captioned film available.
Theatergoers report that theaters do little or nothing to
appropriately advertise their captioned movie showings. Theaters do not
have signs informing of the availability of captioned movies. Deaf and
hard of hearing people find it difficult or impossible to navigate
theater voice menu systems, and callers who reach a live person working
at a theater often find that person has no information about when films
will be available or at what show times. Open captioned films are rarely
shown during popular weekend times.
Harry Potter is big in the home of Eileen McCartin. She and her
family were eager to see "Harry Potter and the Chamber of
Secrets" when it began showing up in area theaters, "Imagine
my disappointment when none of the dozen screens in the area had a
captioned version," she said. McCartin, who is deaf, depends on the
captions, which are similar to subtitles, to understand the dialogue and
be able to share her family's enjoyment of movies.
Barbara Raimondo, who has two deaf children, was equally frustrated
during the recent holiday season. "Although there are lots of
blockbuster movies out this time of year, we found nothing with captions
in the movie pages during my children's two week winter break from
school," she said. "This means my kids don't get to go to the
movies like hearing children and enjoy an afternoon eating popcorn and
watching the latest flicks.
Asks Raimondo, "Why does Hollywood treat my children like second
class citizens?"
The experiences of these two families echo those of thousands of
others, say members of the Coalition for Movie Captioning.
"It is extremely difficult to believe that it is too expensive
for studios to provide captioning of their movies when copies are
routinely subtitled for distribution in non-English speaking
countries," Heppner said. "Those copies can also be made
available at the same time the film is released in the United States so
there's no excuse for the delay in making captioned versions available
here."
The Coalition for Movie Captioning welcomes new organizations and
individual members. For more information, contact NVRCheryl@aol.com,
battat@shhh.org, or jimhouse@tdi-online.org.
To view the coalition's mission statement, position paper and
statement of expectations:
http://www.shhh.org/news/cmcpp.cfm
http://www.nad.org/infocenter/newsroom/othernews/CMCpositionpaper.html
http://www.tdi-online.org/fs_cmc_position_paper.html
To view the full Status of Movie Captioning report:
http://www.nad.org/infocenter/newsroom/nadnews/cmcstatus.html