Urban Roots

Documentaire
    Réalisé par Mark Macinnis • Écrit par Mark Macinnis
    États-Unis • 2011 • 91 minutes • Couleur
  • N° ISAN :
    non renseigné
Résumé

Pas de résumé français disponible.

Urban Roots is a documentary that tells the story of the spontaneous emergence of urban farming in the city of Detroit.  Detroit, once an industrial powerhouse, is a city devastated by the loss of half its population due to the collapse of manufacturing.  By the looks of it, the city has died. But now, against all odds, in the empty lots, in the old factory yards, and the sad, sagging blocks of company housing, seeds of change are taking root. With the most vacant lots in the country, citizens are reclaiming their spirits by growing food. Dedicated citizens have started an urban environmental movement that is transforming not just a city after its collapse, but also America at the end of its industrial age.
Urban Roots shows dedicated Detroiters working tirelessly to fulfill their vision for locally-grown, sustainably farmed food in a city where people – as in much of the county – have found themselves cut off from real food and limited to the lifeless offerings of fast food chains, mini-marts, and grocery stores stocked with processed food from thousands of miles away. The people of Detroit have taken on the enormous task of changing this for themselves, and to understand their story is to understand how we can change it for us all. Urban Roots is a story that reveals that the best in us can prevail in the most difficult of times; and in the most difficult of places, new hope emerges.  This growing movement of urban farmers is changing the way people think about food—and life in the “D”. It took men like Henry Ford, William Durant, and Lee Iacocca to build this city, but it’s taken a bunch of strong willed self-taught urban farmers to save it. 

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