| Sweet Nothing in My Ear | |
|---|---|
| Based on | Sweet Nothing in My Ear byStephen Sachs |
| Written by | Stephen Sachs |
| Directed by | Joseph Sargent |
| Starring | Jeff Daniels Marlee Matlin Sonya Walger Ed Waterstreet Phyllis Frelich David Oyelowo John Rubinstein Carlease Burke Shoshannah Stern Noah Valencia |
| Theme music composer | Charles Bernstein |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original languages | English American Sign Language |
| Production | |
| Producer | Marian Rees |
| Cinematography | Donald M. Morgan |
| Editor | Michael Brown |
| Running time | 110 minutes |
| Production company | Hallmark Hall of Fame |
| Original release | |
| Network | CBS |
| Release | April 20, 2008 (2008-04-20) |
Sweet Nothing in My Ear is a 2008 Americanmade-for-televisiondrama film directed byJoseph Sargent and is based on a 1998play of the same name byStephen Sachs, who also wrote the teleplay.[1] It starsJeff Daniels andMarlee Matlin as Dan and Laura Miller, the parents of deaf child Adam, played by Noah Valencia, who struggle with deciding to give their child animplant that will allow him to hear again. The film premiered onCBS as aHallmark Hall of Fame presentation on April 20, 2008.[2] This was the final film directed by Sargent before his death on December 22, 2014.[3][4][5]
With the film,Hallmark and producer-director Sargent revisiteddeafness with a universal theme contemplating the relationship of a minority group to society at large, 23 years after their previous film on a similar theme, theEmmy-winningLove Is Never Silent (1985).[6][7] Daniels studiedAmerican Sign Language before filming, in order to portray the language accurately.
Dan and Laura Miller have been married for nine years, are separated, and in a custody dispute over their deaf son, Adam. Their close relationship began to change when Adam loses his hearing at the age of four, the condition was initially accepted as Laura is deaf since her youth. Adam turns eight years old and he is injured when Dan is unable to warn him of oncoming danger. Dan begins to explore the idea ofcochlear implants.
Flashbacks show how various situations in the Millers' lives have been advantageous and unfortunate to be deaf. The effects of deafness on the relationships of Adam's grandparents are explored as one set, Laura's parents Max and Sally, is deaf and the other, Dan's parents Louise and Henry, is hearing. The issue of deaf pride anddeaf culture weighs in from the family.
The attorneys and the witnesses at the custody hearing focus on the benefits and disadvantages of cochlear implants. The case is to resume following the weekend. Both parents see that living separately is not helping with the raising of their children and they will make the decision as a family.[1][6][7][8]
The film was reviewed by Brian Lowry forVariety; the review summary reads, "Hallmark and producer-directorJoseph Sargent revisit deafness with a universal theme that contemplates the relationship of a minority group to society at large. Here, the pivotal question involves a choice unavailable to most minorities — whether they would opt out of that status if possible. Buoyed byMarlee Matlin andJeff Daniels' strong performances, theHall of Fame's 233rd entry suffers a tepid ending but still gets its thoughtful point across, loud and clear."[6]