yHOMELESS?
(a film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Glen Dunzweiler directs and compiles this documentary. Nearly homeless himself he travels to thirteen major cities to interview the homeless, find how they live, and find what choices they do and do not have. And generally he gets an appreciation of the extent of the homeless problem and what it is doing to people. Most viewers will already be aware of the problem of homelessness and many issues involved, but the degree of the problem is stunning. Rating: low +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10

I have been told that in the Stalinist days in the Soviet Union the Soviets suggested a film exchange with the United States. We would choose Soviet films to show in our country and they had chosen US films to show in the USSR. All the films that they chose were films of protest showing how bad conditions were for some in the United States. First up would be John Ford's THE GRAPES OF WRATH. In it the Joad family from Oklahoma during the Great Depression lost their home to the bank and had to pile into their car and drive to California looking for work and a place they could stop. The film was to be put on tour. The first showing the Soviet audience was stunned by what they were seeing. "You mean that in the US even *poor* people have cars?" The film tour was cancelled. Yes, in America your house can be foreclosed on and you may still have your car. Glen Dunzweiler's home was nearly foreclosed on, but poor as he was he still had his car and he used that as a springboard to make this documentary.

Had Dunzweiler lost his home he would have been turned out on the street, literally homeless. He decides to visit thirteen major US cities make a documentary about the life of the homeless who actually are out on the streets. He will sleep in his car or if invited on the couches of people he meets. He will have a minimum of money for food. The film will document the condition of the homeless he meets. He finds what it is like to sleep outdoors, frequently not even under cover. There are places where there is no sanitary plumbing. He lives the life of the homeless and interviews people who do.

Dunzweiler looks at aspects of homelessness like finding shelter; how cities are spending to help the homeless--not always in the most effective manner; how did people come to live on the streets; what is life on the street like; what happens when the young or whole families are put out on the street, how are homeless military veterans treated (1 in 4 homeless adults is a veteran while veterans are only 1 in 9 in the population), how much crime is there with homeless victims. Some may be living on the street only temporarily (e.g. waiting for veterans benefits to kick in) and others will never escape. A Catch-22 bites some: they cannot get a job without an address; they cannot get an address without a job. Dunzweiler interviews 50 homeless people and 25 advocates for the homeless.

Dunzweiler finds relevancy not just for the currently homeless, but a little bit of money is all that is between any of us and the life on the street. Many people do not own a home and some do but their income is based on one job. Lose that job and they perhaps cannot get another. They may be one paycheck away from homelessness. Some of the people living on the street have been poor all their lives and some may have been fired from well-paying careers. Dunzweiler points out fallacies about the homeless. He started out assuming that most of the homeless are "addicted to drugs or mentally ill." For many homelessness is just a lifestyle they have been forced to adopt and a small fringe actually likes the homeless style of living.

yHOMELESS? gives a reasonably thorough examination of the problems of the homeless and a feeling for their circumstances. I rate yHOMELESS? a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale or 7/10. yHOMELESS? is available on DVD and on VOD. (I saw no explanation for the lower case "y" or the question mark in the title.)

Film Credits: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1995512/ combined

What others are saying: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/ yhomeless/?search=yhomeless

					Mark R. Leeper
					Copyright 2016 Mark R. Leeper