Ko ta maatau whare pikitia me to wharepukapuka whakaataata ka taea noa te rere, te tango mai ranei ma nga mema anake
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Les maisons de la misère (1936)
Borinage left Henri Storck profoundly disturbed by injustice and social poverty. When he was offered a chance to make the film he undertook an in-depth survey into the working class and slums and shouldered his camera as a militant filmmaker. In a plot of Walloon slums he staged characters and situations as examples. All shots work on intensity, the filling of the frame, which gives the impression of being unable to breathe, of being trapped, closed in. And in the face of this overflowing misery is the emptiness of the expressions, the absence of emotion. Survival is all. But the message of hope is there, with the destruction of slums (the hovels are demolished as if getting rid of a tyrant) and the construction of garden cities surrounded by trees in bloom and a future of song, leaves one with the impression that man’s dignity has been safeguarded.
Momo: Documentary, Drama
Maka:
Kaimahi: Henri Storck (Director), Henri Storck (Editor)
Subtitle: ETC.