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Best Kept Secret (film)

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Awards
  
Peabody Award

Duration
  

Language
  
English

7.5/10
IMDb

Director
  
Samantha Buck

Genres
  
Documentary, Drama

Country
  
United States

Best Kept Secret (film) movie poster

Release date
  
May 4, 2013 (2013-05-04)

Writer
  
Francisco Bello, Samantha Buck, Zeke Farrow

Production companies
  
American Documentary, Inc., BKS Films, LLC

Similar movies
  
Refrigerator Mothers (2002), Children of the Stars (2008), How to Dance in Ohio (2015), Autism: The Musical (2007), Normal People Scare Me (2006)

Best Kept Secret is a 2013 documentary film that was directed by Samantha Buck and produced by Danielle DiGiacomo. The film aired as part of POV on PBS and focuses on a special education teacher who must find her students a place in the real world as they prepare to leave the public school system.

Contents

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Best kept secret trailer pov 2013 pbs


Synopsis

The documentary follows one of the classes attending JFK High School in Newark, New Jersey, as they prepare for graduation. In a year and a half they will graduate from the public school system and go on to their next stage of life. What makes Janet Mino's class different from some others is that she teaches special needs students and some might find it difficult to move on to things that others without disabilities would find easier to accomplish.

Production

During filming Buck received no interference from the principal of the high school and found the school and its staff very accommodating. She chose to use the class's teacher, Mino, as the documentary's storytelling vehicle, as they viewed her as "the thread that pulled all of those stories together". She and DiGiacomo also felt that "The best way to get people to care about a social issue that they might not have a personal relationship with is to get them to be emotionally involved and to care about people so by telling a story where, hopefully, you care deeply about Mino and her amazing experience — she's so expressive and the guys have good personalities and you care about them — I felt like that was the best way to get people emotionally connected."

Reception

Critical reception for Best Kept Secret has been overwhelmingly positive and the movie holds a rating of 100 on both Rotten Tomatoes (based on 11 reviews) and Metacritic (based on 4 reviews). It was a New York Times Critics Pick. Variety praised the documentary for focusing on minority groups with disabilities such as autism as opposed to "white, middle-class children" and the contrast in the options available to the minority groups. The Los Angeles Times commented that the movie "unfolds with limited on-screen explanatory text and no expert talking heads, inserting the viewer into the overwhelming experience of teaching, parenting, even being an underprivileged young adult with autism.""Best Kept Secret" was one of five nominees for the Gotham Independent Film Awards' Audience Award and the winner of a 2013 Peabody Award.

References

Best Kept Secret (film) Wikipedia
Best Kept Secret (film) IMDbBest Kept Secret (film) Rotten TomatoesBest Kept Secret (film) themoviedb.org