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Dark Days
 
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Dark Days

Marc Singer , Marc Singer    NR (Not Rated)   DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)

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For two years Marc Singer lived with the people who make their home in the tunnels beneath Penn Station in New York, creating an unflinching portrait of a part of society that is literally and figuratively beneath our notice.

"You'd be surprised what the human mind and body can adjust to," says Tito, one of the tunnel dwellers. He and his neighbors are homeless, but the tunnels offer them a degree of safety that doesn't exist on the streets above. In this strange place they manage to achieve a remarkable degree of domesticity, building shelters, keeping pets, and cooking meals.

Singer has an eye for telling images, such as Dee dragging a sofa along the train tracks like Sisyphus rolling his stone in Hell. With its grainy black-and-white photography and haunting soundtrack, this is a surprisingly beautiful film, but it is never sentimental, nor does it try to impose a false nobility on its subjects. Dark Days simply shows us a world that we never knew existed, and in this simplicity lies its power. --Simon Leake

Video Details

"Dark Days" is the multi-award winning documentary from Marc Singer about a community of homeless people living in a train tunnel beneath Manhattan. The film depicts a way of life that is unimaginable to most of those who walk the streets above. In the pitch black of the tunnel, rats swarm through piles of garbage as high-speed trains leaving Penn Station tear through the darkness. For some of those who have gone underground, it has been home for as long as twenty-five years. The director abandoned life on the outside to spend all of his time in the tunnels, making it his home for two years. Surprisingly entertaining and deeply moving, "Dark Days" is an eye-opening experience that shatters the myths of homelessness with the strength and universality of the people the film represents.

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Customer Reviews

19 Reviews
5 star:
 (15)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Who is this guy?, May 24 2004
By 
This review is from: Dark Days (DVD)
Who's this guy, Mark Singer? Why was he crawling around in the tunnels beneath New York City? Where did he go after making this film?

None of these questions are answered by the DVD's intriguing short film on how "Dark Days" was made.

What we do get is a quick picture of a man obsessed by a group of homeless living in an abandoned train tunnel underneath New York. The other reviewers have pointed out how unsentimental, yet full the depiction of these people is. I agree. I'd go further. It's like an angel was dropped out of the sky to make this movie, and then vanished.

Okay, so that's hyperbole.

But that's the kind of whacky thought that occurs to you when you watch the hand-twisting, blushing director describe the movie he made - perhaps the best frickin' movie ever made about homeless people...EVER - the fact that making the flick drove him temporarily into homelessness, the fact that this guy out of NOWHERE wins all the dang Sundance awards a few years back not only for the message, but for the astoundingly beautiful cinematography, yet the kid never made films before... yadda yadda yadda.

This is a landmark film. More hyperbole, perhaps. But the plight of the homeless is one of the biggest problems facing the industrial West. And yet...and yet...zero discussion. Zero concern. Instead, we get a lot of lip about how the homeless are lazy and shiftless and live off the government, etc. "Dark Days" shows that the homeless are people. Humans. Complete and beautiful, flawed and ugly. The whole deal. How can you walk away from this movie and see a panhandler without a feeling of, not pity or compassion, but empathy?

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars wait wait- there's more!, July 18 2006
By 
Phoebe "My taste is FLAWLESS! Also, I don't s... (SAINT LOUIS, MO, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dark Days (VHS Tape)
Guys guys guys, if you saw it on the sundance channel or wherever, you need to see the dvd for the special features, which shows the making of, which is astounding, and the update on where everyone is now.

For people who haven't seen it and want to know if they'd like it: Well, it's about homeless people who live underground in a tunnel and make a little shantytown there in the dark. If this sounds promising to you, you won't be disapointed. If you're superficial and easily grossed out you won't like it. Also: It's in black and white. There, that should divert the people who would not give this movie its proper five stars. Back to the rest of you: It's mainly interview-driven, and they have helpful subtitles so you know the difference between Tito and Clarence, say, because instead of doing everyone seperately and one at a time, the way the 7up-42up movies do, they keep coming back to people, and you see lots of them hanging out together, so it's important to know who is who. And it moves pretty fluidly between the hilarious, the tragic, the fascinating and the adorable. The whole buffet of experience and emotion. These people really opened up to this guy, and when you see the making-of bit, you understand why. The director and the subjects have in common that they endured conditions that would crush most people, and did an amazing job with what they had. I want to know what happens to all of them for the rest of their lives.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A surprisingly uplifting movie, May 19 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Dark Days (DVD)
Director Mark Singer spent about three years working and living in the tunnels of NYC, where a group of homeless people squatted, sometimes for years. These people have set up makeshift shacks, complete with electricity, occasional "running water," decorations (one man paints "NO CRACK") on his doorway, and pets. For a group living in squalor and rats, they talk endlessly about keeping clean, eating properly (kosher restaurants are the cleanest!) and being safe. Theyre overall a smart, resilient bunch, and the movie has some very funny moments as well as more serious ones. Dark Days is fascinating, both for the stereotypes it confirms (drug use and mental illness are major players in the sad descent of the homeless) and refutes. Some of the characters become very memorable. One is Ralph, a middle-aged Puerto Rican, a former crack addict, with a soft-spoken, articulate demeanor. Ronnie, despite the obvious ravages of homelessness and drug addiction, still retains a kind of boyish, hustling charm as he describes all the money he makes from selling knickknacks on the side. Then there's Tommy, a runaway from an abusive family who if he cleaned up could be an Abercrombie and Fitch model. Dee is the only woman in the group, and one of the most memorable moments in the documentary is when Ralph tells Dee to quit smoking crack, and Dee points out that Ralph constantly smokes pot. "But all dope makes me do is like eat eat eat" says Ralph.
The DVD extras are almost better than the documentary itself, with 15 extra scenes that don't add much to the narrative of the story but are extremely entertaining and fun to watch. There's a happy ending that feels a bit tacked on, but also reflects Mark Singer's determination to save these people and get them above ground.
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