‘Spotlight’ Oscar campaign screenings: an unconventional support environment for abuse survivors

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

By Amy Kaufman

Frank and Virginia Zamora were among the last to file out of the movie theater. The couple had seen “Spotlight” before, but still it was a jolt. Especially watching one particular actor with green eyes. He looked a lot like their son, Dominic, who died last year following a battle with alcoholism, an addiction his parents believe began after he was molested at age 8 by a priest in the Los Angeles Archdiocese.

“One day, when he was about 12, he told us he didn’t want to be an altar boy anymore,” recalled Virginia. “He and his dad got into an argument. Frank said, ‘It’s an honor to be an altar boy.'”

“I was an altar boy,” Frank interjected. “I always had respect for the priests. They were second to God.”

“Spotlight,” about the Boston Globe investigation that uncovered rampant child sex abuse within the Catholic Church, brings all these memories to the surface for the Zamoras. Which would seem to be a reason to stay away from the film and its Oscar campaign as it competes for six Academy Awards, including best picture.

Instead, the couple went out of their way to make the Culver City screening, which had all the trappings of an awards season gathering: a logo-patterned backdrop for photos, chicken skewers, a Q&A with movie talent.

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