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Most of the tearful kids have been forced or tricked into being committed by their parents ..'I thought we were going skiing in Russia' one cried. They are angry and frustrated, something they let out at the joint therapy sessions they are made to have with their parents, supervised by earnest female doctors who look almost as young as their charges.
Part clinic, part school, part boot camp, the parents have to pay what is twice the average Beijing salary (10,000 yuans) for their offspring to be 'cured'. They claim that this really is their last resort as their kids skip school and spend days/weeks doing nothing else than play video games. The extreme ones even wear nappies so that they never ever have to take a break from playing.
It was however hard to see from this film if this treatment of computer addiction as a clinical disorder was effective or not. Most of the young boys were bright enough to eventual learn to give the expected responses to the Doctors that they knew would speed up their release. In fact the movie deliberately ends on a high point as we see one of them finally being allowed to leave with his parents, although I have this sneaking suspicion he will soon revert back to his old ways.
I started out watching this documentary actually thinking how very cruel and inhumane the whole situation was, but if this really is a problem of such epidemic proportions, I simply have no idea what an alternative solution should, or could, be.
Its an excellent and fascinating documentary by filmmakers Shosh Shlam & Hilla Medalia that made compelling viewing and could become as addictive as it subject.
★★★★★★★★
★★★★★★★★