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Children Underground | 
enlarge | Director: Edet Belzberg Actors: Cristina Ionescu (ii), Mihai Alexandre Tudose, Violeta 'macarena' Rosu, Ana Turturica, Marian Turturica Studio: New Video Group Category: DVD
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $14.98 You Save: $9.97 (40%)
New (27) Used (7) from $11.22
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 17721
Format: Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 104 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.1 x 0.6
MPN: D9508D UPC: 767685950838 EAN: 0767685950838 ASIN: B00008G8MC
Theatrical Release Date: 2001 Release Date: February 25, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW AND FACTORY SEALED
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Amazon.com This astonishingly intimate documentary follows five homeless children in Romania, where the collapse of communism has led to a life on the street for 20,000 children. From a 16-year-old girl who runs her gang with a mixture of brutality and compassion, to a small, intelligent, and remarkably articulate 12-year-old boy, these children seem at first feral and frightening--yet over the course of the movie their loneliness, desperation, and glimpses of hope will transform how you perceive them. Make no mistake: this is difficult watching. As Children Underground explores the meager state resources to support these children and follows some of the children back to their difficult families, the scope of the problem becomes larger and more irresolvable. But this documentary offers an unblinking and deeply compassionate insight into the extremes of human existence; you will not forget it easily. --Bret Fetzer
Description Easily one of the most astonishing and engaging cinematic works of the past decade, CHILDREN UNDERGROUND is a profoundly intimate and heart-wrenching drama -- an Academy Award Nominee for Best Documentary Feature in 2001, and winner at nearly every major
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| Customer Reviews: Read 9 more reviews...
Suki May 16, 2008 I just want to start off by saying I have seen many documents in my time but none as compelling as this one. I felt so sad and angry at the same time watching this video. The children in the documentary seem so feral and yet so innocent at the same time, it's a strange feeling that overcomes you when you watch this film. Children of course should never live in these conditions right, however some choose to stay on the streets it is as though they are addicted to the freedom, drama and the pain. I couldn't watch, yet, I couldn't look away. It's so sad.
Dark documentary, not for everyone's consumption May 24, 2007 This documentary shows the affect of the end of Communism in Romania, and policies of Chausescu to have Romanians have more children, many of which ended on the streets or orphanages. Some of the footage is quite shocking, and indeed sad. But it depicts reality in many parts of the world - which is a nice eye-opener once a while to learn how fortunate some of us are to have a reasonably good life, which we tend to take for granted.
A Top Ten Film May 15, 2007 Everyone has her/his own personal list of Top Ten films of all time. Before yours gets written in stone, watch this film first. You will revise your list to include this film.
tragic documentary on childhood destition and homelessness January 22, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Oscar-nominated documentary that explores the tragic policy decision by Romanian dictator Nicolei Ceaucescu to outlaw contraceptives and encourage his impoverished populace to have more children. Thousands of children were born to broken or dysfunctional families in a nation mired in political and economic instability, resulting in a large and rapidly growing population of homeless children (more than 20,000 estimated) in the city of Bucharest. (As an aside, there are some organizations that have short-term volunteer programs in Romania where you can work with some of these kids. One of these type programs is offered through Global Volunteers.) This film is important partly because you can see the very quick and long-term result of policy decision.
Show It To A Teen, Show It To Yourself. Among The Best Of Films. October 24, 2006 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
If you are you are reading this review, chances are it is from the privileged side of the digital divide. You're probably using a laptop at a café. Maybe you're using your personal computer at work or at home. Not too far from you, there's a kid who laments their sheltered life. There's a James Dean or a Holden Caulfield who is confronting the numbing insanity of a prosperous American childhood. This kid is growing up a lot like I did, with a full belly and not much to do. They have out-of-touch adult authorities who enforce a dull reality. Just for a day, they wish they could go experience life on the street. They wish they could explore booze and cigarettes and all the other things they aren't allowed to do. They see kids at school who are less supervised. Those kids have so much more fun in life. This kid is depressed. Home does not meet their expectations, even if it fulfills their material needs. She feels trapped by not chasing her expectations of a rich and interesting life in clubs, drugs, and intimacy. Maybe he wants to find out what it's like to be addicted. Maybe she actually believe that parties exist like the ones they stage on sitcoms. Maybe he just stares at cool kids out his parents' minivan window and believes they have a better life.
You need to find this kid and force them to watch Edet Belzberg's Children Underground. Why is it important for kids who grew up like I did to watch a documentary about homeless children in Romania? I'm not sure. The film has a way of sobering any fantasies about street life and addiction. I can't describe what it's like to see these children puff away at plastic bags filled with paint thinner as middle-class adults nonchalantly pass them. Kids of all ages puff away at cigarettes and cut themselves, but it's not rebellious. It's not "cool" or "Goth" or "Emo" or a cultural accessory to being "deep" or "thoughtful." It isn't "stupid" or able to fit within moralistic or social-Darwinist jargon. It is naked poverty and naked mental illness. All of the judgment and persona that American culture invests in poverty and illness seems to melt in the testimony of Romanian children.
Perhaps this documentary is so moving because the "face" of poverty in American popular culture is adult and non-white. This is an illusion but it frames the way in which we think of social ills. Young, white preteens aren't supposed to live lives of drugs, violence, and homelessness. At least, we aren't supposed to see these lives. I'm pretty sure that there are kids in Chicago, New York, and Seattle whose lives aren't unlike those of these children in Bucharest. Maybe you and I step over them in the Subway without noticing. Maybe we see those eyes in the face of a young stranger and resolve not to do anything about it. Of course, not all good intention has good consequence. The film is also a critique of charities and social services that can be woefully inept at meeting the childrens' needs. Good individuals are undermined by flawed bureaucracy.
Children Underground does not raise complex problems and placate the viewer with simple answers. One wishes the hardware store would stop selling the kids paint to snuff until they drool and spasm. One wishes the state would stop trying to place kids back in homes that they identify as abusive. One wishes that birth control was affirmed as a human right. Belzberg gives a glimpse of the human condition that undermines the way in which American culture relates to the body through commodity and desire. Like the best cinema, the subtext for the audience makes the main text profound.
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