LOS ANGELES, United States — Once a year, Hollywood hosts the Oscars — but
every night hundreds of homeless people sleep on and around the
Los Angeles neighborhood’s star-lined streets.
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Those two
starkly contrasting worlds are set to collide next month when the directors of
“Lead Me Home,” a nominated film on the US’s homeless crisis, plan to invite
their subjects onto the
Oscars’ red carpet as their guests.
“Hopefully, on
the day of the ceremony we can shine a little bit of a light on that
juxtaposition, and raise awareness of the humanity that’s right across the
street, literally, and that we’ve all been ignoring for too long,” said Pedro
Kos, co-director of the short documentary.
“We have our
fingers crossed that we can bring two or three of them with us” to the March 27
ceremony, his fellow director Jon Shenk told AFP.
The film,
available on
Netflix, follows a dozen or so homeless and vulnerable people in
Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle over the course of three years.
It presents an
intimate detail of their daily routines and struggles on the streets, and their
hopes and dreams for escaping them.
Seen as less than
human
Subjects include Luis Rivera Miranda, a middle-aged dog-owner who
strikes up romance with a fellow
homeless woman, and Ronnie “Futuristic
Astaire” Willis, who dances for tourists on Hollywood Boulevard in order to
afford food.
“He has an
extraordinary story — someone who is a classically trained dancer, who has
danced with Janet Jackson, who choreographed Sisqo’s ‘Thong Song,’ who fell on
hard times, unfortunately, due to many different factors,” said Kos.
In Willis’s
scenes “you actually see the side of the Dolby Theater” where the Oscars are
held, he added.
According to the
filmmakers, a major problem is that so many people view their unhoused
neighbors in a dehumanizing way, and convince themselves that the homeless must
be to blame for their own plight.
But asked how
they became homeless, the film’s subjects list diverse factors such as
disability, rejection by family members after coming out as transgender, and
even depression triggered by the 9/11 attacks.
“I think it
comes from our own fear of falling through the cracks,” said Shenk.
(Photo: AFP)
“And so, we’re
hoping that the film can in some ways provide a new perspective that
personalizes this, breaks it down, says, ‘Hey, wait a minute, let’s remember
who we’re talking about — these are
Americans, they’re our neighbors, they have rights, they are people.’”
‘Crisis of
humanity’
The directors gained access and earned their subjects’ trust by working
with a number of homeless support organizations.
Rather than
interviewing them directly, Shenk set up his camera at shelters where the
homeless underwent “vulnerability assessment” interviews, leaving the room so
that they could discuss their situations more freely.
But one of the
film’s more harrowing moments comes as a homeless woman tells a social worker
at a makeshift camp that she has been beaten again by a man called Mike,
prompting the social worker to call a shelter to help her escape.
“For women, the
sexual violence is really real,” said Shenk. “I can’t think of a woman that we
met that didn’t have some story related to that.”
Shenk and Kos do
not have a grand solution to a problem that plagues every elected leader in the
West Coast cities — and other US cities as well — but said that simplifying the
vast bureaucracy of programs available to the homeless would be a start.
Los Angeles is
currently conducting its first homeless count in two years. The last census was
scrapped due to
COVID-19.
The film notes
that moratoriums on evictions brought in due to the pandemic are about to
expire, potentially worsening the crisis.
“There’s no
question in our minds that there is a giant crisis of humanity going on in
America,” said Shenk.
“We hope to use this
tiny little moment that is shining on our tiny little film to have an open
conversation that allows people to see perhaps a perspective they haven’t been
exposed to on this issue.”
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