Great moments of true realistic drama. "Cinema verité" of superb quality. No guidance, no judgement, just direct observation. Its like a fly on the scene! A "60 minutes" paradigma. Jon Alpert (Jonny on the credits): a name to remember.
Synopsis
''I may have limited intelligence, and limited abilities,'' said Mr. Alpert, who has earned nine Emmies. ''But one thing I do have is that people will let me into places that other people can't get into.'' The results are portraits of lives that are incredibly detailed and therefore convincing in their ugliness: Rob, Freddie and Deliris fall, rise and fall again to drugs, crime, irresponsibility, poverty, cruelty and disease in trajectories devoid of prime-time glamour. Freddie, just out of jail, desperately cruises and sometimes deals heroin. Deliris turns tricks in trucks while her young children wait on the sidewalk. The subjects are white and Latino, which Mr. Alpert said made him less worried about inadvertently perpetuating racial stereotypes and allowed the film to show people of all races making crucial, seemingly inevitable mistakes. —Ulf Kjell Gür
Uploaded By: FREEMAN
March 24, 2022 at 05:32 PM
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720p.WEBMovie Reviews
Its like a fly on the scene!
The gritty and true mean streets in a life of crime.
This is the best documentary I've ever seen period. If you want to know the true meaning of a life of crime in the gritty urban streets where surviving is a constant state of uncertainty and despair THIS IS IT. The film provides an in depth look at 3 troubled adults and the children that become involved in this never ending downward spiral of drugs, sex, and crime. The main drug of choice is the society that grips it's victims into perilous danger in which no one may come out alive. The reality of this film can be hard to digest for the average viewer. The film is completely accurate in ways many Americans simply cannot comprehend. The television news stations fail to even scratch the surface in their diluted portrayal of urban sprawl. Finally, as a sequel to One Year In A Life Of Crime I give this a 10.
Sad But True
This is a tragic but real sequel of the lives of Deliris, Rob, and Freddy, three individuals battling the realities of drugs, crime, and inner-city life in Newark, NJ. Kudos to Jon Alpert for his excellence in chronicling these three wayward souls, their children and families. "Life of Crime 2" is a riveting documentary that should be recommended viewing for high schools in order to expose the dangers, excesses, and all too real consequences of drug addiction and crime.