This person (philyoung....)clearly has no idea what being homelessness is truly like--He judges too quickly without understanding or even *wanting* to understand. A genuinely fine photographer as he states he is would need to exude empathy to portray an honest review or photograph. Empathy cannot be learned. Either we have it or we don't. I was a homeless woman decades ago with 2 very young children after our apartment building was sold and we were forced to live where we could while I worked and my children attended school. We slept in shared quarters with other homeless families while all of us in shelter tried to feel "normal" as if there were such a thing. Now my children are grown, successful adults, after being honor students all throughout school and well behaved, but nothing will ever shake the memories of feeling so lost, depressed, alone and misunderstood alongside all the fears and uncertainty which engulfed us daily, so before some snotnose says he doesn't get the impression or feeling (oh really?!) of homelessness from the film and/or its characters perhaps he should literally humble himself enough to experience homelessness firsthand.