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Dark Days
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Directed by Marc Singer.
Novice filmmaker Marc Singer lived in the bowels of a midtown Manhattan railway station for two years to shoot this harrowing account of the day-to-day existence of the homeless. Shot in noirish black and white, Singer shows how society's discarded and disenfranchised fashion a community of sorts in the sunless labyrinth of the station's transit tunnels. Though told without narration, a dozen or so individual stories emerge. Dee (the sole woman depicted in the film) lost all her children in a house fire while she was high on crack; Ralph remains inconsolable after his five-year old's rape and mutilation during a stint in prison. In the final reel, Amtrak sends in armed police to clean out the tunnels, citing health concerns. However, the subterranean tenets happen upon a stroke of luck, as an NYC social worker discovers a cache of previously unclaimed public housing. Featuring a sparse soundtrack by DJ Shadow, Dark Days won the Grand Jury prize for cinematography, the Freedom of Expression award, and an audience award at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Dark Days (2000, USA, Marc Sing ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Roger Ebert has said that the greatest quality of film is that it is better than any other medium in showing you what it is like to be someone else. I think he's right. Dark Days is a perfect example of that. It is a documentary about the homeless. It is not a piece of propaganda or advocacy. It simply records the lives of people who are more like us than we would want to beleive. The homeless and the poor are the invisiable members of our society. We see them and ignore out of fear, or just out of awkwardness. We may sympathize with their pleight, but we do not know how to deal with them in person. Marc Singer, a young Englishman living in New York, had seen a TV news story about a group of homeless living in "The Tunnel", a long group of urban catacombs under a train station. A great many homeless live there, in small huts constructed out of planks of wood they find lying around. Singer went down out curousity, and somehow befriended a few of them. He felt that there sto ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Top 5 black and white movie ...
by Risselada in Top 5
liked it.
"Mand Bites Dog and Dark Days are ones I thought of as well. No, I wouldn't count Pleasantville because there is color in it. I'm actually surpised you guys mentioned that one. I've never sat down and watched it, but I put it in one time when I was working at a video store and caught a lot of it. It seemed pretty horrible to me. I also wouldn't count Sin City for the same reason. It has color in it. Even though I wished I could count it. I guess technically The Man Who Wasn't There was shot in color, but the final product is all in B&W, so I would count that. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Recalling the films of Robert Frank, Dark Days is a compassionate and haunting portrait of a subterranean community of the homeless. The two years director Marc Singer spent living in the catacombs of New York's train tunnels dumpster-diving for food clearly paid off: Singer's documentary boasts a surprising intimacy between his homeless subjects and the camera -- on numerous occasions they banter as freely with Singer as they do with each other. The director manages to draw out some exchanges that are both funny --as when Lee gives a rambling but impassioned speech about his decreased pets -- and horrific -- as when Ralph recalls his child's rape and dismemberment. The past for many of the tunnel people is a constant source of torment, be it Dee's loss of her children to a house fire or the disintegration of Ralph's marriage due to crack. In spite of the bad air, perpetual darkness, and rats, most subterranean dwellers argue that life in the tunnel is infinitely preferable to the streets, where they are prey to crime and the elements. Beneath Manhattan, they have constructed shanties out of lumber and cardboard and furnished them with TVs, powered straight off the city's grid. Their daily life makes up a large part of the film's structure: we see how they eat, shower, and kill time. One character points out the best dumpster in which to find good food, arguing that the grub is not only clean, but kosher too, while another has managed to construct a shower of sorts from a leaking water main. Thanks to Singer's stark black and white cinematography, Dark Days has the claustrophobic quality of the bottom of the ocean, which adds to its taunt intensity. Although its ending is oddly mushy and seemingly inconsistent with the rest of the work, Dark Days is a powerful document of humanity's will to survive and a first-rate piece of urban ethnography. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 



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