Lost Angels: Skid Row Is My Home (2010) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
10/10
A moving experience
susan-14323 August 2012
This film is a touching and candid portrayal of life on the streets of Los Angeles' Skid Row. I was truly enlightened by the compelling spirit of love and community in this troubled pocket of Los Angeles. Who knew? I just want to hug all the characters in this film. And they are true characters - all with their own unique and diverse stories, but their paths all led them to LA's Skid Row. Lost Angels is an eye opening, mind opening and heart opening film filled with life, laughter and insight into the humanity that lives in the heart of LA. I will never look at another homeless or "on the skids" person the same as I have in the past. I understand now that they have their obstacles and demons, but don't we all? l have so much respect for the dignity these people have even in the worst of times. DirectorThomas Napper does an exceptional job crafting this message of hope.
18 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
wow.
aovershiner26 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I watched this movie and holy****! It made me sad, grateful, and extremely angry at what has and is still going on every day for all of these poor people. Every one of the police not helping them should be ashamed of themselves and also taken off the police force. The politicians who are masterminding these laws should be thrown out of office, never again to be put in a position of power. I mean I'm no idiot and I know that these and far worse injustices happen every day, but seeing it just hits it home. This really should be shown in schools all over the country so that more greedy, materialistic,over privileged, whiny people can see it and learn more compassion. Does anyone know how to write any of the characters and or become pen pals with them? Some of them really made me admire them and look up to them because of the atrocities they have lived through. can i contact the movie maker or something somehow? not trying to be weird or anything.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
One of the strongest and best documentaries I have ever seen.
zkiko31 July 2019
One of the strongest and best documentaries I have ever seen. A must watch to even be shown in high schools or college. I watched this a few years ago and still I am very much influenced by what I have seen. Even though I knew that many homeless people self medicate and take certain drugs to counter the side effects of certain pharmaceuticals they have been prescribed. It still made me learn more about certain lives , lives that are unrepresented, whilst 'we' keep watching movies, shows, vlogs, instagrams etc about the privileged whiney narcissists. This doc shows how the system - made for the basic healthy norm' is flawed and the invisible people fall through the mazes of that system. Time and time again, also in Europe where I am from. I am so glad that this documentary exists and that it voices for the invisible and voiceless and can be shown to those that easily judge and say 'all homeless people are bums'. Their pathetic need to compartmentalize the world in simple black and white boxes so they won't have to think or feel. Those ..are the people that truly ruin this world..those and the narcissistic that just don't care about none but themselves. The system is flawed, so it's on use human beings to think, to introspect and empathise..so we can truly help one another. Damn..this world is an f'in trip.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Skid Row
carena326 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Caitlin Arena

-POSSIBLE SPOILER--

Shelter is one of the most basic human rights. No one chooses to go without it or to be homeless. However, in society today homelessness has become a real aspect of life for many, especially with the mentally ill or drug addicted, the most vulnerable populations of our society. In Thomas Q. Napper's award-winning documentary, "Lost Angels" Skid Row is my Home; approximately 11,000 of these people are portrayed. Within this community substance abuse, alcoholism, street fights and death can be found; however, more often than not kindness, generosity and friendship are visible as well. Not only does this film focus on the physical and social conditions in and around Skid Row, but the political system is examined as well.

Physically, living in Skid Row is not comfortable way of life. The streets are dirty and dangerous. Many drug addicts use Skid Row as a place to partake in drug use. An individual can be robbed or worse while walking on the streets. However, positives can be found as well. People created their own version of a neighborhood by placing tents side by side. What might look like garbage to an unfamiliar observer is actually a collection of precious goods to someone living on Skid Row. What the average person might take for granted, the people of Skid Row truly value.

Socially, Skid Row is a fascinating look at how people, regardless of their economic or social standings, can come together as people and create a beneficial network. The people of Skid Row are not judgmental or rude to one another. Instead, they protect each other and defend their neighbors from harm or harassment. It is astonishing to see people of such limited means come together and value one another as human beings. The residents of Skid Row do not look at each other to see what they can gain from others; they look to see how they can help others. Although they may be suffering from mental illness or drug addiction, they still treat each other with respect and kindness.

Politically, the people of Skid Row are striped of their rights and treated like animals. The mistreatment of the people of Skid Row is by the police. The mistreatment is protected by the governmental institutions at power in California. While for many years the people living in Skid Row were left to their own devices things changed in 2006 when the Safer Communities Initiative was created. This did not help the homeless community in Skid Row, instead it allowed for the mistreatment of persons by police harassment. Instead of taking a humanistic approach to Skid Row residents, the city decided to dehumanize them and violate their rights in hopes they would disperse and move elsewhere. However, through this harassment the people remained strong and united. As a police officer taunts one homeless man another comes to his aid. Many bond together to help one another and maintain their community.

This film proves to be an excellent example of how criminalization of people who are mentally ill or addicted, along with outside factors such as gentrification and poor health care, has led to a community of outside of our everyday society. Physically, socially and politically this community is unlike any other that we see within society. This, however, does not mean that the people living there are any less than anywhere else.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed