FILM

    Waste Land

    Waste Land

    Presented by The Colonial Theatre at The Colonial Theatre

    April 3, 2011


    Comment on Facebook

    “Located outside Rio de Janeiro, Jardim Gramacho is the world’s largest landfill, collecting an astonishing 70 percent of the city’s garbage, and a full 100 percent from the surrounding suburbs. It isn’t just a dump, it’s a village populated by “pickers” who rummage through the piles for recyclable materials and take their earnings back to families in neighboring shantytowns.

    Seen from above, the pickers look uncannily like ants on a mound, congregating en masse whenever a dump truck unloads another pile, and scurrying in and out with bags full of bottles and plastic they can turn around for money. On the surface, however, there's a surprisingly sophisticated, and evolving culture at work, with scrappy laborers trying and succeeding to convert trash into (extremely modest) treasure, and even organizing to their collective benefit.

    The compelling documentary Waste Land follows an ideal tour guide through Jardim Gramacho: Vik Muniz, a successful Brazilian artist known for incorporating trash and other unconventional materials into his work. (Muniz has recreated Da Vinci's Mona Lisa twice, once with peanut butter and again with jelly, and did a series of portraits called Sugar Children, made from sugar taken from a plantation that employed the very young.) Muniz's idea was to photograph pickers from Jardim Gramacho, sell the images at auction, and pump the proceeds back into the community. Lucy Walker's documentary gives voice to the six subjects of Muniz's photos, who range from the optimistic leader of a 3,000-person picker-representing organization to a cook who salvages unspoiled meat to feed her fellow workers.

    Though narrower in scope and lacking the first-person angle, Waste Land resembles Agnes Varda's great 2000 documentary The Gleaners & I, particularly in its awe of tough, creative, hard-working people who live on the margins. The dump itself is a marvel to behold, and Moby's eerie score adds a cinematic ambience that helps relieve some of the stock documentary elements, like the way Muniz's adventures are sometimes framed like a reality-TV show. It also does Muniz one better by humanizing photographs that are often too aestheticized and unresponsive to how his subjects actually live and work. Waste Land travels to an island populated by society's discards, and finds a piece of salvation." (Scott Tobias, The Onion AV Club)


    Directed by Lucy Walker. Brazil. 2010. NR. Running time: 99 min.


    • At-a-
      Glance

      • Venue Info

        The Colonial Theatre

        227 Bridge Street
        Phoenixville, PA 19460

        Full map and directions

      • Admission Info

        Tickets:

        $5

        Buy Tickets

      • Dates & Times

        Dates:
        April 3, 2011

        Times:

        4 pm

      • Accessibility Info

      • Site Credits

             

         

        Phillyfunguide is the Greater Philadelphia region’s “go-to” web site for information about upcoming cultural, entertainment and sporting events. Phillyfunguide and Funsavers are programs of the Cultural Alliance's research and marketing initiative "Engage 2020." "Engage 2020" is sponsored by a lead grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts, with additional support from The Wallace Foundation and The Philadelphia Foundation. Phillyfunguide and Funsavers are also supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Art Works.
        Copyright © 2005-2010 Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance. All rights reserved.

        Contact Us | User Agreement/Privacy Policy | Report An Error | Site Map | Funsavers Submission

      • Artsopolis Network