Film Fuels Debate Among Adopted Families

ByABC News
April 12, 2007, 1:37 PM

April 12, 2007 — -- The new film, "Meet the Robinsons," about a boy's journey to find the birth mother he's never known, is going gangbusters at the box office, raking in $51,947,271 as of Sunday night.

It is also causing a vigorous debate in adoption circles. While some love the movie's message of living for the moment, others complain about "Robinsons'" portrayal of orphanages and the adoption process.

The movie's opening scene shows a baby being left on the doorstep of an orphanage. As the little boy grows, he keeps track of more than 100 potential adoptive families who have come to visit him and then rejected him.

That story line is generating lots of attention online -- some positive, some negative.

"I took my kids to see 'Meet The Robinsons' a few days ago," wrote blogger Virginia M. Citrano. "My boys, who were both adopted from Russia, loved the movie. I was appalled. If I had known about the way adoption is treated in this new Disney film, I never would have taken them."

Other adoptive parents praised the story line. A woman named Kim extolled the filmmakers for their treatment of the scene where the baby is left on the orphanage's doorstep.

"They were sensitive about how the [biological] mom may not have been able to take care of him, and that's why she gave him up. It was a little sad in spots, and might require some explanation for an older adoptee, but overall I didn't think it was a horrible message," she wrote. The mother of a 5-year-old adopted boy added: "I just don't think it would be a 'positive' for him."

"It is as loving of a portrayal as I could imagine them showing. You can see that she loves him and wants the best for him in the scene," wrote another parent currently waiting to adopt a child.

A mother of two adopted kids, writing on the Web site adoption.com, disagreed. "I think this would be a tough movie for an older child who spent more time in the orphanage. Especially as there is a child who was left behind there and grows up to be the 'bad guy,'" she said.