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Detropia

Play trailer Poster for Detropia Released Sep 5, 2012 1h 30m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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86% Tomatometer 42 Reviews 64% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
Filmmakers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady examine the decline of Detroit and the stalwart residents who remain in the once-thriving city.

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Detropia

Detropia

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Critics Consensus

Detropia takes a comprehensive yet intimate -- and above all devastatingly powerful -- look at the rise and economic ruin of an American city.

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Critics Reviews

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Barbara VanDenburgh Arizona Republic A fascinating portrait of a 21st-century post-industrial hellscape. Rated: 3.5/5 Nov 1, 2012 Full Review Inga Saffron Philadelphia Inquirer Detropia's filmmakers stay out of the picture, hanging back to allow the viewer to absorb the meaning of Detroit's fate. It is even more complex than we thought. Rated: 3/4 Nov 1, 2012 Full Review Tom Keogh Seattle Times A startling, haunting documentary about a once-great city, "Detropia" is all but a eulogy for Detroit. Rated: 3/4 Oct 18, 2012 Full Review Jordan M. Smith IONCINEMA.com With a mindful eye and an evenhanded approach, stark photography and unmitigated confessions, Detropia gives an austere depiction of a floundering city, but the acceptance of failure remains unthinkable while potential still remains. Feb 9, 2020 Full Review Steve Erickson Gay City News ... the film has a clear perspective: Detroit as a microcosm of the impact of global capitalism... Feb 22, 2018 Full Review Stuart Klawans The Nation Ewing and Grady give you the numbers in Detropia. They give you the ruins, too-richly photographed by Tony Hardmon and Craig Atkinson and astonishingly well edited by Enat Sidi-but their main interest is far from prurient. Jan 9, 2018 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member If the 1920s were the best of times for the city of Detroit, Michigan, the late 2000s were absolutely the worst of times. Detropia, a marvelous documentary by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, isn't exactly a tale of two cities. It's interested exclusively in profiling the worst of times in the Motor City, which is why it opens with a home getting demolished. This home is just one of thousands across Detroit (circa 2010) that's decrepit, abandoned, and both a visual and environmental scourge on the city. The only industry thriving, it seems, is the demolition business. The UAW (United Auto Workers) is being forced to accept steep pay cuts. Restaurants are empty. The arts are suffering. It feels like the setting of a post-apocalyptic film. Ewing and Grady's approach is in the tradition of a Pennebaker Cinéma vérité documentary insomuch as they stay completely removed from the proceedings. Yes, there are versions of your standard "talking head" interview, but they're all done in the moment. Detropia doesn't feature any sets or narration, which lends a great deal of truthfulness and immediacy to the picture. The film arguably tries to do too much, but considering it's trying to do something very broad-profile a city in ruin-it feels quite thorough. We meet Mayor Dave Bing, who's big plan is to relocate many of the city's residents into a denser population center. We spend some time with a local bar owner who's concerned, but ultimately optimistic about his city's chances. We head to an auto show to learn a little more about the electric car movement that's helping to revive the city. And we meet the leaders of the auto unions who long for a time when jobs were plentiful. All of this adds up to a film that packs a punch and feels surprisingly complete. Of course, it isn't. A two-hour profile of a city in peril can't possibly be complete. But if feels that way, and as such, it's a supremely satisfying film-one of 2012's very best documentaries. http://www.johnlikesmovies.com/detropia/ Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Audience Member A fascinating documentary about the ruins of the Detroit auto-industy, before the bail-out. The heartache, the hopelessness, and the fight to stay alive. It all seemed real, but when the white hipsters came in, it lost me. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/14/23 Full Review Audience Member A great portrait of what has happened to America's great city. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/16/23 Full Review Audience Member Eye rollingly pretentious at times, disjointed and politically inflected, yet at the same time heartbreaking and sobering Detropia is not a great documentary but a good insight into the challenges of post-fordist rust belt America. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/04/23 Full Review Audience Member A sad tale that enlightened me on Detroit's massive population exodus due in large part by outsourcing American factory jobs. The killer is in the details when watching this movie and hearing of GM being bailed out by America only to have fine print like mandating a 50% pay cut to new hires and eliminating dental and vision coverage for workers. We send aid overseas, we send jobs overseas, yet we don't take care of our own. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/09/23 Full Review Audience Member This movie was boring. I live near Detroit and it didn't bring any new perspective to the city. Other than manufacturing, it focuses on the same thing that every urban Midwestern city has faces for 30 years. Boring. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review Read all reviews
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Movie Info

Synopsis Filmmakers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady examine the decline of Detroit and the stalwart residents who remain in the once-thriving city.
Director
Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady
Producer
Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady, Craig Atkinson
Distributor
Loki Films
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 5, 2012, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Aug 10, 2016
Box Office (Gross USA)
$287.6K
Runtime
1h 30m
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