‘CODA’ Will Make You Want to Call Your Mom

There's a reason Apple TV+ bought this movie for $25 million.

There’s a moment in CODA when 17-year-old Ruby (Emilia Jones) tells her mom, Jackie (Oscar-winning actor Marlee Matlin), she has joined the choir. Rolling her eyes, Jackie shoots back in American Sign Language, “If I was blind, would you want to paint?”

Ruby, as you may suspect, is not deaf like her former pageant mom, rough-edged fisherman father, Frank (Troy Kotsur), and hot, business-minded brother, Leo (Daniel Durant). CODA, which stands for child of deaf adults, tells the story of a teenager balancing her passion for singing, high school drama, and first love with her duties as her family’s only interpreter for their fishing business in Gloucester, Massachusetts.

While the mother-daughter moment reads charged on paper—and immediately elicits a storm-off from Ruby—this is not the emotional, gut-punching moment it could have been (though plenty of those appear throughout the film). Instead, the words drip off Jackie’s hands casually, without thought, like every mom internalizing her daughter’s choices and assuming it’s all about them. As if to emphasize the everyday nature of this argument, Jackie interrupts Ruby’s dramatic exit with a reminder to take her dish to the sink.

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This aching authenticity is exactly what writer-director Siân Heder and the entire cast of CODA brought to the film that took it from a trope-heavy coming-of-age story with an endearing, folksy soundtrack to a film deserving of the $25 million record-breaking sale to Apple TV+ after its award-winning Sundance debut.

While it may have started on the page, this authenticity weaved through every layer of the filmmaking process, especially when it came to casting. “Deaf characters shouldn't be considered a costume that you put on and take off as a hearing person,” Matlin tells Glamour over Zoom. “So I don't think you can authentically play a deaf character if you're not deaf. It might have been that way in the past, and I think that just was rooted in ignorance.”

And with a mostly deaf cast (Jones, like her character, is hearing and underwent nine months of ASL training for the role), Heder tells Glamour that “deaf culture really made our set culture.”

“We discovered that ASL was this brilliant set language,” she says over the phone from the same Gloucester shores where CODA was filmed. “My A.D. and I were signing when we were out on the boat, and Emilia and I were signing with each other when she was on the cliff and I was down below in the quarry. What started as trying to figure out how to make our set accessible became a brilliant tool that we were all using.”

For Matlin, who has worked in Hollywood for over three decades, this was liberating. “I was in my element,” she says. “I've always had fun on the set, but there were sometimes limits put on me because I had to depend on interpreters and when I had to communicate with my costars. But this time, it was all so open, and it was just a free exchange of ideas.”

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This culture behind the scenes translated to the remarkable onscreen chemistry among the Rossi family—particularly Matlin’s Jackie and Kotsur’s Frank, who may have officially beat out Easy A's Patricia Clarkson and Stanley Tucci as my favorite coming-of-age movie parents.

Still, it’s the relationship between Ruby and Jackie that stuck with me nearly a year after watching and crying about this film with my own mother during Sundance. Like that of many mothers and daughters, their relationship was loving and funny and painful and heartwarming, though never wrapped up in a perfect Hollywood bow.

“I'm a mama bear, if you want to put it that way,” Matlin says. “I brought that aspect to Jackie. Jackie and I are different for the most part, yet we both are very strong mothers. And that's what I could have brought to this film.”

As for the film’s accolades and $25 million price tag, she adds, “This is a film that proves that we need so many more stories like this, so many more characters, so many deaf actors. I would hope that people who make films happen, can say, ‘Hey, look, this happened with CODA. This can happen again.'”

CODA is available in theaters and to stream now on Apple TV+. Emily Tannenbaum is an entertainment editor, critic, and screenwriter living in L.A. Follow her on Twitter. 


This story originally appeared on: Glamour - Author:Condé Nast