The Norwalk Hour

Giffords documentar­y comes as gun debates stay center stage

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In the two years documentar­y filmmakers shadowed former Congresswo­man Gabby Giffords, the most jarring moment for them was in the kitchen of her Tucson, Arizona, home.

As cameras were rolling, she and her husband, Sen. Mark Kelly, nonchalant­ly opened the freezer. Kelly grabbed a plastic container and revealed it holds the piece of Giffords’ skull that had to be removed after she was shot.

“This stays in here next to the empanadas and the sliced mango,” Kelly said.

Giffords’ response was “Será, será,” referencin­g the song “Que sera, sera” or “What will be, will be.”

The scene from the film is emblematic of Giffords’ openness to reflect on but not languish in the 2011 shooting that changed her life. That desire is what led her to allow cameras into her life for two years — all as a pandemic was progressin­g.

“For me it has been really important to move ahead, to not look back,” Giffords told The Associated Press while in Los Angeles to promote the film. “I hope others are inspired to keep moving forward no matter what.”

From the filmmakers behind Academy Award-nominated Ruth Bader Ginsburg documentar­y “RBG,” the film “Gabby Giffords Won’t Back Down” is partly an intimate look at Giffords’ recovery after the January 2011 shooting that left six people dead and 13 others wounded outside a Tucson supermarke­t. But the movie, which arrives in theaters July 15, is also an insider view of how she and Kelly navigated gun control campaigns and later a Senate campaign. The movie could not be any timelier with gun reform being debated in government, schools and the U.S. Supreme Court.

“It’s just a fascinatin­g story about how Gabby came back from an injury that so many people just don’t even survive,” said Betsy West, a co-director. “After meeting Gabby on Zoom, we saw just what a great communicat­or she is. And we had a sense that we might have a lot of fun despite the very difficult subject of gun violence.”

Giffords often has to remind people that she still has a voice even if speaking doesn’t come easily — whether it’s on gun safety or other issues. She said she genuinely feels the climate is different now but people have to be patient because change is “slow,” and Washington, D.C., is “really slow.”

 ?? Chris Pizzello / Associated Press ?? Gabby Giffords, center, the subject of the documentar­y film “Gabby Giffords Won’t Back Down,” poses with the film’s co-directors, Julie Cohen, left, and Betsy West.
Chris Pizzello / Associated Press Gabby Giffords, center, the subject of the documentar­y film “Gabby Giffords Won’t Back Down,” poses with the film’s co-directors, Julie Cohen, left, and Betsy West.

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