Video Sources 0 Views

  • Watch traileryoutube.com
  • Source 1123movies
  • Source 2123movies
  • Source 3123movies
Detropia 2012 123movies

Detropia 2012 123movies

Sep. 07, 201293 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Detropia 2012 123movies, Full Movie Online – The woes of Detroit are emblematic of the collapse of the U.S. manufacturing base. Is the Midwestern icon actually a canary in the American coal mine? DETROPIA is a cinematic tapestry of a city and its people who refuse to leave the building, even as the flames are rising..
Plot: Detroit’s story has encapsulated the iconic narrative of America over the last century – the Great Migration of African Americans escaping Jim Crow; the rise of manufacturing and the middle class; the love affair with automobiles; the flowering of the American dream; and now… the collapse of the economy and the fading American mythos.
Smart Tags: #manufacturing #car_manufacturing #detroit_michigan #automobile_factory #news_footage #political_art #eccentricity #graffiti_art #street_artist #street_art #graffiti_artist #parade #artist #capitalism #title_directed_by_female #opera #protester #worker #working_man #labor_union #urban_decay


Find Alternative – Detropia 2012, Streaming Links:

123movies | FMmovies | Putlocker | GoMovies | SolarMovie | Soap2day


Ratings:

6.5/10 Votes: 1,606
86% | RottenTomatoes
68/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 34 Popularity: 2.505 | TMDB

Reviews:

Is it over yet?
All I ask for out of a documentary is that it teaches me something and makes me feel. Although Detropia doesn’t belong in the trash heap, it did not live up to these simple expectations I have put in place. Detroit definitely has an interesting story; in the 1930’s it was one of the most populated states in the country, certainly the easiest place to find a good job. Slowly (with the passing of NAFTA in the late 90’s- thanks Clinton) jobs left, followed by people. Detroit has seen the largest mass exodus in the country. The film informs us that almost 10,000 houses per month are torn down because they have been abandoned. The city is in ruins. I thought this would make for a good documentary.

First of all, why is the city going through such problems. I think the directors blame the North American Free Trade Agreement, which is fine because it’s probably true. However, they assume that the viewer knows all about NAFTA and exactly how it effected the Detroit auto industry. All they explain is that NAFTA happened and CEO’s moved their jobs to Mexico, which caused factories to shut down. I would have appreciated a little more depth into NAFTA; maybe a 90 explanation of why NAFTA meant that companies could move down south, why it passed, who was for it, who was against it? Maybe an interview with a proponent and an opponent. Maybe try to get in touch with spokespeople from these companies. Instead we are left having to pause the movie and do our own research.

As a drifter in his early 30’s, I’m interested in cities like Detroit. I think places like this are where the revolution is gaining steam. The documentary spends a few minutes describing what is happening. Very briefly they say that there is a plan in the works to move people who live on the outskirts into the city, in order to create more density. Then, they would convert the outlying area to potentially urban gardens. This is a fascinating idea, revolutionary even, yet that’s pretty much all we hear about it. We are shown clips of what appears to be a town hall meeting about the proposal, and then we hear three elementary school dropouts saying, “they be playing gardens? That’s dumb yo. People be shooting each other over tomatoes.” That’s it. That’s all we’re told about the future of Detroit.

Finally, I understand that a city that poor obviously has a pretty dismal education system (although that doesn’t explain why the older people, who lived most of their lives during the boom, are also dumb as cow poop), but surely they could have found someone to interview who had the ability to put together intelligent sentences. The main characters are a video blogger (the closest of the bunch to an average IQ), a burned out owner of what appears to be a Blue’s club, and a union leader/pimp. Are there no professors? Are there no community groups? Talk about lazy; it seems like the directors had a few friends in the area and interviewed them. Or maybe they just found the first few people they saw, and mic’d them up. Regardless, the documentary sucked. The only positive is that I’ll now to more research on the city.

Review By: expatriate16
Not going to negotiate … what?
Greetings again from the darkness. Admittedly, I am tough on documentaries. My expectations are quite high. Reason being, documentary filmmakers need not be burdened with fluffy entertainment requirements. Instead, they can tell a story, debate an issue, or expose a wrong. Wasted opportunities annoy me.

Have you heard anything about the economic hardships in the city of Detroit? Of course you have. It’s been a story for more than two decades. So a documentary “exposing” the hardships in Detroit should at least offer a different perspective, debate options, or discuss the challenges of progress. Otherwise, it’s a wasted opportunity, which is what we have here.

The film is beautifully photographed and very well put together. It’s just missing a reason to exist. It’s a clump of different pieces that don’t fit and provide little insight. We get a clueless local union president who is clinging to the past and offering no help to his constituents. We get some obscure video blogger whose main credentials seem to be that she lives in Detroit and has her own camera. We get a couple of guys sitting on a front porch making fun of any efforts by local officials to develop solutions.

There seems to have been a very narrow focus on choosing who to interview. At least Tommy Stevens, a local bar owner, is an interesting guy to follow around. He holds out hope that GM will open a Chevy Volt plant and spur business at his club, so he can re-hire his cook. His hopes are dashed when he attends a local auto show and finds out that China has an electric car that at a significantly lower price than Chevy. He recalls the days that stubborn US automakers refused to acknowledge upstart Honda in the US.

We are offered brief glimpses into some type of town hall meeting and the absolute rejection by the union of the “last” offer from American Axle. We are shown a few clips from inside the Detroit Opera, which the Big 3 automakers continue to finance. Lastly, we are introduced to a couple of young artists, who are part of a growing trend of relocations to inner city Detroit to take advantage of the low rents and low housing costs.

All of the above are interesting enough, but again, it’s been two decades and we only get one angry lady spouting off about Mayor Dave Bing’s seemingly appropriately creative idea of consolidating the outlying areas into a smaller geographic area, so the city can provide services for its citizens and start the process of healing and growing.

There seem to be two real issues worth analyzing. First is the unwillingness of so many to accept that change has already occurred … so fighting change is a lost cause. Your city is broke. No need to make things worse. Secondly, looking into the true cause of the downturn could lead to interesting discussions of greed. Corporate greed as well as the greed of the people. The Chinese can make a car (and TV’s, washing machines, etc) so much cheaper because they are not holding on to our standard of living. Detroit has been called the birthplace of the middle class, but just what is that definition today? These are some of the discussions that need to be had. Just one more look at houses being torn down and empty hotels … all with the shiny GM towers in the background … is just a re-hash of what we already know. So yes, the wasted opportunity has me annoyed.

Review By: ferguson-6

Other Information:

Original Title Detropia
Release Date 2012-09-07
Release Year 2012

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 30 min (90 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Not Rated
Genre Documentary
Director Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady
Writer N/A
Actors Noah Stewart, Rachele Gilmnore, Michael Wanko
Country United States
Awards 9 wins & 6 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix N/A
Aspect Ratio N/A
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

Detropia 2012 123movies
Detropia 2012 123movies
Detropia 2012 123movies
Detropia 2012 123movies
Detropia 2012 123movies
Detropia 2012 123movies
Original title Detropia
TMDb Rating 6.6 34 votes

Director

Director

Cast

Similar titles

The Revolutionary 2011 123movies
1917: The Real Story 2020 123movies
Brian Wilson: Long Promised Road 2021 123movies
Space: Unraveling the Cosmos 2014 123movies
Jack to a King: The Swansea Story 2014 123movies
War Dog: A Soldier’s Best Friend 2017 123movies
Strong Island 2017 123movies
My Generation 2017 123movies
What Difference Does It Make? 2014 123movies
Mala Mala 2014 123movies
The Possibilities Are Endless 2014 123movies
Dawson City: Frozen Time 2017 123movies
Dame101.com: 123movies