70 Acres in Chicago: Cabrini Green

by
Year Released
2017
Film Length(s)
56 mins
Closed captioning available
Remote video URL

Introduction

Filmed over a period of 20-years, 70 Acres in Chicago: Cabrini Green chronicles the demolition of Chicago's most infamous public housing development, Cabrini Green, the displacement of residents, and the subsequent area gentrification. This complex, poignant film looks unflinchingly at race, class, and survival.

Featured review

A front-row seat into one of the nation's most emblematic affordable housing struggles.
Professor Larry J. Vale
MIT

Synopsis

70 Acres in Chicago: Cabrini Green is a stunning documentary that explores the effects of Chicago's 1.5 billion dollar Plan for Transformation, an edict requiring the demolition of the city's public housing. Shot over a period of 20-years, the film follows the impact this has on the lives of the residents of Chicago's Cabrini Green housing development.

With its central location, Cabrini was hailed as a public housing triumph and demonized as an urban disaster. Beginning in 1995, it was demolished and then repackaged as a mixed-income development, where, unsurprisingly, the former, largely black residents have been marginalized or driven away. 70 Acres documents this upheaval, from the razing of the first buildings in 1995, to the clashes in the mixed-income neighborhoods a decade later. The film tells the story of this hotly contested patch of land, while looking unflinchingly at race, class, and who has the right to live in the city.

Reviews

...speaks volumes about gentrification and the concept of 'mixed-income' housing.
Odie Henderson
RogerEbert.com
...a valuable chronicle of the particulars of urban change
Ray Pride
New City
A startling case study into the making and destruction of one of Chicago's most infamous public housing projects.
Tony Binns
Rollingout.com

Awards and Screenings

Best Documentary Feature / Collected Voices Film Festival, 2016
Black Excellence Award Nominee / 15th Annual Black Excellence Awards, 2015
Black Harvest Film Festival, 2015
African Diaspora Film Festival, 2015
Big Muddy Film Festival, 2017
Chicago International Social Change Film Festival, 2016
Indy Film Festival, 2016
America ReFramed PBS Broadcast, 2017
University screenings at UCLA, MIT, Cornell, University of Virginia, Hunter College, The Ohio State University, DePaul University, and many more.
Corporate screenings at companies including Chicago Urban League, OneGoal, and Timshel Company
Community screenings including Black Cinema House, California Institute of Integral Studies, Center for Civic Engagement (Northwestern University), Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago Public Library, and the Garfield Park Conservatory

Director Commentary

The Evolution of 70 Acres in Chicago by Filmmaker Ronit Bezalel

“I’ve always been interested in issues of housing, race, and class. When I arrived in Chicago in 1994, I was struck by the segregation. I moved here from Montreal to study film at Columbia College. In Montreal, we were a city divided by language—English speakers and French speakers—but Chicago was totally different. I had never lived in such a racially segregated city.

I saw Cabrini Green from the train windows while taking the Brown Line “L” train to school, and wondered who lived behind the brick walls and gated windows. People told me to avoid Cabrini – it was too dangerous. So of course, this made me more even curious. What was Cabrini? And, why were the people living at Cabrini so stigmatized?

I was in a film class taught by filmmaker Judy Hoffman when I decided to make a short film about Cabrini Green. I was introduced to fellow Columbia College student and Cabrini Resident, Mark Pratt, who became one of my guides into the community. It was 1995, and the first Cabrini high-rises were being torn down. I wanted to know why they were being demolished and where the people who lived there would go.

We began filming that year, during the fiery protests to save public housing. We gained the trust of the residents and they began sharing their stories of a close-knit, complicated community. Our camera followed their struggle to remain at Cabrini, culminating in moving vans and wrecking balls. The short film morphed into my master’s thesis, and in 2001, we released Voices of Cabrini: Remaking Chicago’s Public Housing--a 30-minute documentary to honor the Cabrini Green residents’ struggle.

But we knew the story wasn’t over. In 2000, Chicago launched its citywide Plan for Transformation, a ten-year plan to tear down high-rise public housing and replace buildings with new mixed-income communities. I kept filming until 2011, when the last Cabrini high-rise was demolished.

70 Acres in Chicago: Cabrini Green follows the redevelopment story over 15 years, as families struggle with the impact of social engineering on their community and personal lives. By putting faces to the story of a mixed-income community, and documenting how people negotiate questionable political policy, the film provides a lens for analyzing the larger picture of economic and racial injustice. Yet it is the people of the Cabrini Green community that stay in sharp focus. And even now, their story continues…”

Features and Languages

Film Features

  • Closed Captioning
  • DVD Extras
  • Resources for Educators

Promotional Material

Promotional Stills

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