As if senior prom, finals and college applications aren’t enough, a Queens teenager is taking on the New York legislature this spring.Sarah Lin, a senior at Bronx Science who has made headlines crusading to make the movies more friendly for the hearing impaired, is continuing her fight in Albany by pushing for a proposed bill that would make it mandatory for movie theaters across the country to provide closed captioning at more screenings.She has become the face of the movement and the brain behind its social media push, giving the cause typically focused on the elderly community a much-needed facelift.With only two weeks left of the legislative session, Lin has been working in overdrive.“I’ve definitely been very busy with school, but I think you always end up finding a way to make time for what you’re passionate about,” Lin, 18, of Kew Gardens, told The Post.“Knowing that I’m able to make such real, impactful change and seeing the actual reactions and the responses from the deaf and hard of hearing community has pushed me to want to continue working on this and continue trying to pass this bill statewide.”The Open Captioning Accessibility Act would require indoor movie theaters across the state with more than 10 shows per week to provide subtitles for at least half of their peak showtimes.The rule has been in effect in New York City since 2021 and is relatively easy to achieve because playing films with subtitles comes at no extra cost for the already struggling theaters, Lin explained.Despite this, the bill has been crawling through the state legislature since it was first introduced in April, a delay that advocates blame on the tense budget negotiations that kept politicians from their lengthy list of proposed bills.The bill has already died in two prior sessions — but advocates didn’t have Lin on their side back then.The Hearing Loss Association of America (HLAA) scooped up the teenager after learning about her foundation Theater’s Unsile...