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Public Housing

Play trailer Public Housing 1997 3h 16m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 4 Reviews 80% Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
Documentarian Frederick Wiseman turns his cameras on a housing project that is home to some of the poorest residents living in Chicago's South Side. The film is composed of a series of vignettes that illustrates the daily lives of lower class Chicagoans as they interact with local police officers, social workers and other outsiders. Events range from felony arrests, substance abuse and drug deals to commonplace domestic scenes of tenants and their families.

Critics Reviews

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Walter Goodman New York Times ... soberly revealing new work. Dec 6, 2017 Full Review Janet Maslin New York Times Issues that are all too familiar -- drugs, crime, teen-age pregnancy, the frustrations caused by government red tape -- take on a new immediacy thanks to the extraordinary intimacy of Mr. Wiseman's working methods. Rated: 4/5 Dec 2, 2003 Full Review Jonathan Rosenbaum Chicago Reader Wiseman presents a wide array of materials, and because you have to reflect on the film to realize how the various pieces of its design hang together, you're liable to be thinking about it months afterward. Dec 2, 2003 Full Review Marc Mohan Oregonian About three hours long, the film takes the time it needs to demonstrate the complexities and frustrations between the residents and the governmental agencies supposedly set up to help them. Mar 5, 2004 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Frederick Wiseman's sprawling 3-hour look at the Ida B. Wells public housing estate in Chicago gets into a rhythm all its own (due to Wiseman's expert editing). Basically, we see Ozu-like moments of cars or people passing through the complex, then a cut to a particular representative episode in the lives of the people who live in or visit public housing. It is interesting to speculate about how Wiseman chose these episodes and how he ordered them within the film. For example, we do see the many problems that residents face: crime, drugs, insect and rat infestations, teen pregnancies, and poverty. Some of these issues arise in passing and some are shown more directly, as when a court-appointed diagnostician asks one resident some incredibly personal questions about his history with drugs and alcohol. In keeping with the themes of some of Wiseman's other movies, the residents often seem to be subjected to some fairly heavy-handed control by authorities, particularly the police who shake down numerous residents, seemingly without need for much justification. However, the control also appears more benignly in the form of some rather paternalistic (though benevolent) programs to assist residents - to avoid unwanted pregnancies, start their own businesses, find meaningful employment, and the like. Although his films are rarely directive (they are without narration or overt structure), Wiseman is even less emphatic here than usual. He doesn't seem to be hitting any themes particularly hard (unlike in Welfare or High School, for example) and the examples of paternalistic control are mixed with episodes that reveal residents to be self-empowered, aiming to fight their own battles (often against bureaucracy) and to improve the moral character of their community (particularly by trying to involve positive male role models in the lives of kids). In fact, despite the drugs, poverty, and general down-and-out feeling of the environment, one might think that Wiseman feels more optimistic about the future in this film. The episodes showing empowerment seem to be placed in the second half of the film, perhaps showing them to be a possible solution to the problems shown earlier. He closes with a motivational address from an ex-NBA basketball player, now working for Housing and Urban Development who is trying to empower the residents to work through the system by appealing to the ways in which minority people have succeeded (including to high levels in the Clinton administration). Although it could be assumed that these inspiring words might go nowhere when people are mired in the day-to-day issues of tough lives, I'm not quite sure Wiseman sees it that way. He never really shows anyone doing bad things (which could, I guess, be unethical) but only people trying to cope with their problematic reality. In any event, Wiseman portrays the subject of public housing in a nuanced and complex way - showing him to be one of the best humanistic documentarians we have. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/04/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Public Housing

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Documentarian Frederick Wiseman turns his cameras on a housing project that is home to some of the poorest residents living in Chicago's South Side. The film is composed of a series of vignettes that illustrates the daily lives of lower class Chicagoans as they interact with local police officers, social workers and other outsiders. Events range from felony arrests, substance abuse and drug deals to commonplace domestic scenes of tenants and their families.
Director
Frederick Wiseman
Producer
Frederick Wiseman
Production Co
Housing Films
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Runtime
3h 16m