Push


Poster image Push

Housing prices are skyrocketing in cities around the world. Incomes are not. _Push_ sheds light on a new kind of faceless landlord, our increasingly unlivable cities and an escalating crisis that has an effect on us all. This is not gentrification, it’s a different kind of monster. The film follows Leilani Farha, the UN Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing, as she’s traveling the globe, trying to understand who’s being pushed out of the city and why.



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Director

Fredrik Gertten

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What happened to our cities to make them places where we can no longer afford to live? This is the question haunting filmmaker Fredrik Gertten and the primary subject of his film, Leilani Farha, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Housing. The two bring us around the world on a quest to understand the secret operation of globalized real estate under capitalism.

 

The film’s relevance to current events is striking. As we find ourselves witness to an unprecedented overheating of the housing market and a housing crisis with no end in sight, we offer this film in an almost desperate effort to see political documentary cinema meet one of its objectives: to give us the sensitive conceptual tools needed to understand reality and then transform it. The film’s comprehensive overview makes it easily the most didactic of this weeks’ works, but Push remains a must-see if we really want to reflect on the epidemic spread of concerns about keeping the roof.

 

 

One of the film’s strengths is how it reconfigures our understanding of the role gentrification plays in the affordable housing crisis. The concept of gentrification is central to one of the most widely accepted views on the affordable housing crisis. Yet it is pushed to the side as we discover the forces at work behind this crisis, which reframe housing not as a fundamental human right but as an investment product. If you come to this film ready to hate on the trendy cafés and hipsters that are ruining your neighbourhood, be prepared to redirect that energy to speculative investment funds, white-collar criminals and off-shore banking schemes.

 

 

 

Stéphanie Bourbeau
Philosophy teacher

 

 


  • FR- Push

    FR- Push


    Language: Français
  • EN- Push

    EN- Push


    Language: English
  • Année 2019
  • Pays Sweden, Canada, United-Kingdom
  • Durée 92
  • Producteur WG Film
  • Langue English, Spanish, French, German, Korean, Italian
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court In all cities, property prices are increasing. Why is it getting so expensive to live in our cities?

What happened to our cities to make them places where we can no longer afford to live? This is the question haunting filmmaker Fredrik Gertten and the primary subject of his film, Leilani Farha, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Housing. The two bring us around the world on a quest to understand the secret operation of globalized real estate under capitalism.

 

The film’s relevance to current events is striking. As we find ourselves witness to an unprecedented overheating of the housing market and a housing crisis with no end in sight, we offer this film in an almost desperate effort to see political documentary cinema meet one of its objectives: to give us the sensitive conceptual tools needed to understand reality and then transform it. The film’s comprehensive overview makes it easily the most didactic of this weeks’ works, but Push remains a must-see if we really want to reflect on the epidemic spread of concerns about keeping the roof.

 

 

One of the film’s strengths is how it reconfigures our understanding of the role gentrification plays in the affordable housing crisis. The concept of gentrification is central to one of the most widely accepted views on the affordable housing crisis. Yet it is pushed to the side as we discover the forces at work behind this crisis, which reframe housing not as a fundamental human right but as an investment product. If you come to this film ready to hate on the trendy cafés and hipsters that are ruining your neighbourhood, be prepared to redirect that energy to speculative investment funds, white-collar criminals and off-shore banking schemes.

 

 

 

Stéphanie Bourbeau
Philosophy teacher

 

 


  • FR- Push

    FR- Push


    Language: Français
  • EN- Push

    EN- Push


    Language: English
  • Année 2019
  • Pays Sweden, Canada, United-Kingdom
  • Durée 92
  • Producteur WG Film
  • Langue English, Spanish, French, German, Korean, Italian
  • Sous-titres French, English
  • Résumé court In all cities, property prices are increasing. Why is it getting so expensive to live in our cities?

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