Detropia (FILM REVIEW)
Detropia
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Cautionary Expose’ Warns of Detroit’s Impending Demise
Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady are a
couple of inspired filmmakers who have kept their finger on the pulse since
founding Loki Films a decade ago. Among the frequent collaborators’ timely offerings
are such critically-acclaimed documentaries as Oscar-nominated Jesus Camp
(2006), the NAACP Image Award-winning The Boys of Baraka (2005) and the Peabody
Award-winning 12th & Delaware
(2010).
The talented pair’s latest tour de
force is Detropia, a pessimistic expose’ chronicling the blight which has permeated
Detroit, an
enveloping decay heralding the perhaps impending demise of a once prestigious metropolis.
Whether a cautionary tale or already a post mortem, the picture is most reminiscent
of Michael Moore’s Roger & Me (1989).
However, instead of searching for a
missing, Michigan
auto industry executive responsible for outsourcing, Ewing & Grady simply sought
to preserve for posterity stark images of a ghost town resulting from callous, corporate
cost-cutting measures. Detropia carefully constructs an impressionistic
cinematic collage of a disturbing dystopia, alternating back and forth between arresting
tableaus of an aging, urban exoskeleton and the plaintive laments of citizens
swept up in a desperate struggling for survival.
For instance, we learn that so many
manufacturing jobs have been downsized that half of Detroit’s population has disappeared into
thin air. Consequently, it is easy to find entire city blocks virtually
abandoned, where only a handful of homes remain occupied.
Exasperated Mayor Dave Bing, a
former NBA star with the Detroit Pistons, freely acknowledges that he has 40
square miles of vacant land on his hands. And equally-frustrated George
McGregor, President of a United Auto Workers Local 22, finds himself stuck between
a rock and a hard place trying to negotiate with a multinational company more
than willing to relocate union jobs to Mexico.
Still, not all have lost hope in the
midst of the misery. Consider the pranksters who altered the sign above a
shuttered “AUTO PARTS” store to read “UTOPIA.” Then there are the picketing, performance
artists dressed like decadent 1%ers who satirize the rich by demanding money of
perturbed passersby.
A
simultaneously surrealistic and sobering warning that the Motor City’s host of woes might be coming soon to a town near you.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 90 minutes
Distributor: Loki
Films
To see a trailer for Detropia,
visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6X1xZO95m2s
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