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As a lifelong native of the Bronx and New York, the older you get the
more you begin to hear about the city and how there is an entirely
different dimension behind the neighborhoods you see on a daily basis.
If you look beyond Manhattan where the landmarks have all turned in to
Disney attractions, if you look past the subways that create the
illusion of sanitary conditions and safety, you'll discover within the shadows and
crevices of every construct that there is a hidden society beneath your
feet. It's a society that very few people acknowledge and even few
discuss, because it's a world most New Yorkers have rarely seen and
never want to be a part of. "The Tunnel Dwellers of New York" examines
the impressive resilience of the impoverished, a massive legion of
homeless folks and unemployed all of whom have retreated in to the
darkness of abandoned train stations and deserted train tunnels to live
among their own kind and build a world none of us have ever seen. Though
many have depicted these societies in stereotypical devices, director
Chantal Lasbats delves in to the sub-communities within these dark caves
where she explores their ability to garner electricity, their custom
made beds and bed rooms, and their methods for garnering food that the
normal world would deem unfit to eat.
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Along the way as Lasbats
chronicles the lives of the select homeless, those without a
stable home or even a stable meal rise to the surface to
also show audiences how they live and how they're able to
get by on the smallest resources. One man is able to stretch
five dollar hand outs in to a week, another shops in the
local garbage dump where supermarkets and stores dump their
food, and another is an infamous gang member who retreated
in to the darkness to stay away from danger. |
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Almost like the Eloi they have become so
accustomed to their way of living but are just as law abiding and docile
as most apartment dwellers. Maybe even more so. Most of the individuals
interviewed are much too scared of the outside world to even emerge from
the sub-world, and would rather stay hidden in the darkness than live
among folks who would judge and demean them.
Like everyone else, the
individuals who live among the rubble and isolation of the tunnels are
just human and beg for respect and understanding, even after the attacks
on the World Trade Center turned them in to public enemy number one at
the behest of Mayor Guliani. There are some stand out moments within the
journey in to the sub-society that will linger with audiences for days.
Two homeless residents shown, are self-appointed guardians to a local
nun who runs a church near their home, and are so loyal to her they drop
to their knees and praise her whenever she has a chance to visit their
home. And in a truly heartbreaking moment, one woman is so obsessed with
her living the American dream of simply having a nice warm home, and
comfortable living condition that she breaks in to tears and hysterical
sobs in front of the cameras. Like us they have dreams, and fears and
goals, except they've found a way to survive on even the most miniscule
resources most of us take for granted.
Director Chantal Lasbats
exploration in to the world behind our world is engrossing, compelling,
and absolutely gut-wrenching, seeking to merely convey to audiences that
the homeless society we normally turn away from in shame and apathy have
found a way to survive on their own, and in many respects have turned
away from us in disgust and loathing.
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