Doesn't solve the issue of homelessness, but at least it captivates your heart by humanizing homeless people and by giving them a voice.
Great Speeches From a Dying World (2009)
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Reviews Counted:7
Fresh:7
Rotten:0
Average Rating:6.8/10
Rated: Not Rated
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:Feb 11, 2009 Limited
Synopsis: Great Speeches director Linus Phillips spent nearly two years getting to know nine of Seattle’s homeless population. The result is a unique and compassionate exploration of the hard luck, wrong... Great Speeches director Linus Phillips spent nearly two years getting to know nine of Seattle’s homeless population. The result is a unique and compassionate exploration of the hard luck, wrong turns and broken dreams that reside on the city’s streets. This film uncovers circumstances that have landed (and keep) these people lost and penniless – most involving abuse, addiction, and mental illness. But it also finds kindness and hope. Each subject was asked to recite a famous speech from history that they felt related to their lives. The words of Shakespeare, Lincoln, JFK and others are reinvested with meaning as they’re tied to these personal stories. From atop the Space Needle high above the parking garage in which she lives, Deborah delivers a speech by former slave Sojourner Truth asking, “Ain’t I a woman?” Jose’s recitation poses a question that most in the film have pondered: whether it is nobler to suffer outrageous fortune or to die. We’re reminded that the authors of these canonized speeches, the downtrodden folks reciting them, and each of us are all part of the same human endeavor. With beautiful photography and a musical score by Lori Goldston and Tara Jane O’Neil, Great Speeches is one of the most intimate encounters with homelessness on film and a moving meditation on the fragility of life.--© Anthology Archives [More]
Director: Linas Phillips
Director: Linas Phillips
Studio: Anthology Archives
Reviews for Great Speeches From a Dying World
The film’s success in giving the voiceless a platform balances out Phillips’s more precocious and pretentious flourishes.
Great Speeches From a Dying World is an unsettling documentary portrait gallery of nine homeless people living on the streets of Seattle.
In a sense, Phillips's mission is a variation on the tradition of semi-orchestrated socially conscious documentary that stretches back through Lionel Rogosin's On the Bowery and beyond.
Grounds the life-and-death struggles of the downtrodden in the quotidian: where to sleep, how to get clean, who to love.
A moving portrait of homelessness that's honest, respectful, heartbreaking yet warmhearted, and brimming with humanity.
This gritty, unflinching documentary by Linas Phillips traces the misfortunes of 10 of Seattle's hard-core homeless over a period of a year.
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February 12, 2009:
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