Hi all, I've been wondering what movie I was watching and the name of it. Hope you have some insight.
It was 1987 and my Dad and I were watching this made-for-TV movie. The set was very soap-opera-ish-sitcom or like a stage play set. It revolved around this young woman who never left home or went to college because her brother was a special needs/mentally challenged kid around 13-15 years old, who couldn't talk intelligibly or even walk right and his mother had to cut up his food and feed him - he was totally helpless. When people would talk to him he would answer with, "Nay nay nay" or some other gibberish. I remember he always seemed to be wearing red clothes.
Near the end, the girl hears the piano playing. She comes down stairs and sees that it's her baby brother playing beautifully. Shocked she walks over and asks how he knew to do that and how did he know how to talk. He then replies in perfect English, "I've always known." Stunned at the revelation that her brother is not mentally challenged, she confronts her mother about this to which the mother basically enabled her son to be this way so her daughter (the girl confronting her) would not go to college or leave home.
The girl is so mad, upset, and disappointed for wasting so much time for such a sham. She then decides to leave home and go to college. The movie ends with the young boy acting mentally challenged again at the dinner table with the mom feeding him.
Sound familiar to anyone?
It was 1987 and my Dad and I were watching this made-for-TV movie. The set was very soap-opera-ish-sitcom or like a stage play set. It revolved around this young woman who never left home or went to college because her brother was a special needs/mentally challenged kid around 13-15 years old, who couldn't talk intelligibly or even walk right and his mother had to cut up his food and feed him - he was totally helpless. When people would talk to him he would answer with, "Nay nay nay" or some other gibberish. I remember he always seemed to be wearing red clothes.
Near the end, the girl hears the piano playing. She comes down stairs and sees that it's her baby brother playing beautifully. Shocked she walks over and asks how he knew to do that and how did he know how to talk. He then replies in perfect English, "I've always known." Stunned at the revelation that her brother is not mentally challenged, she confronts her mother about this to which the mother basically enabled her son to be this way so her daughter (the girl confronting her) would not go to college or leave home.
The girl is so mad, upset, and disappointed for wasting so much time for such a sham. She then decides to leave home and go to college. The movie ends with the young boy acting mentally challenged again at the dinner table with the mom feeding him.
Sound familiar to anyone?
Last edited by Rollogic; 08-21-18 at 04:57 PM.