There Goes the Neighborhood
A film by Angelique Molina
THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD intimately follows an extended Black family of View Park-Windsor Hills, California as they experience changes due to gentrification and reflect on their shifting community.
US | 2016 | 27 minutes | Color | DVD | English | Order No. 191239 |
SYNOPSIS
THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD intimately follows an extended Black family of View Park-Windsor Hills, California as they experience changes due to gentrification and reflect on their shifting community.
View Park-Windsor Hills is the largest Black middle-class neighborhood in the country. Adele Cadres is a longtime resident and mother of three who gives us insight into the history of the neighborhood. Her eldest daughter Ayana Cadres raises her biracial children with the hopes that they foster the utmost respect and reverence for the Black community she grew up in. Adele’s youngest daughter, Aida, struggles to find an affordable home in the neighborhood due to increasing property value. As the family and other residents reflect on the history and culture of their neighborhood, they debate the issues of maintaining a changing community.
As the national conversation about the housing crisis continues and more and more people are being priced out of the market, THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD provides intimate access to the families most affected by this growing issue.
PRESS
"The film was masterfully directed, beautifully shot, and left me as an audience member filled with empathy, curiosity, and perhaps most importantly, humility."
SCREENING HIGHLIGHTS AND AWARDS
- San Diego Latino Film Festival
- New Orleans Film Festival
- Pan African Film Festival
- Los Angeles Film Festival
- NorthWestFest
- Langston Hughes African American Film Festival
- American Documentary Film Festival
ABOUT FILMMAKER(S)
Angelique Molina
Angelique, an LA native, spent her time as an undergraduate student studying Child and Adolescent Development at San Francisco State University. Upon graduating, she dedicated much of her time to a local art collective and photography classes. Inspired by visual storytelling, she moved back to Los Angeles to pursue a career in filmmaking. After working as a production and camera assistant she to applied to the University of Southern California, where she studied to become a cinematographer and director. While attending USC she shot and directed multiple short films ranging from the documentary HOMEGIRLS to the Student Academy Award nominated, fictional drama, AMELIA'S CLOSET. She is currently working on extending her short film THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD into a television docuseries. (5/19)
RELATED LINKS
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Facebook Page
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Los Angeles Times
'Black Beverly Hills' debates historic status vs. white gentrification
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Bisnow
Residents Grapple With Change Coming To View Park, LA's 'Black Beverly Hills'
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Read Civia Tamarkin's director's statement here.