Makers of film on Oakland's recyclers await word
from Sundance
Filmmakers hope 'Dogtown Redemption,' a compassionate look at people eking out a
living by recycling, wins a slot at Sundance.
Amir Soltani, right, producer/director of "Dogtown Redemption," talks to Dee,
one of many recyclers he has befriended at West Oakland's Alliance Recycling Center.
The documentary, six years in the making, follows people who push shopping carts through
town, collecting recyclables as a way of making a living. (Lee Romney, Los Angeles Times /
September 11, 2013)
By Lee Romney
November 30, 2013, 9:00 a.m.
OAKLAND — Amir Soltani moved into his brother's townhouse eight years ago in a new
West Oakland development touting itself as a bridge between "industrial and
residential neighborhoods."
He had fled Iran as a child for a life of relative privilege in Britain and the U.S.,
where he attended elite colleges. Yet Soltani understood displacement and the
outsider's lack of belonging. And he saw and heard something he could not ignore.
The clang clang of the shopping carts formed a spectral nighttime symphony as recyclers
congregated from miles around. Some pushed loads of as much as a thousand pounds on rigs
lashed together with street ingenuity. Their destination: Alliance Recycling.
Local residents had long clashed with Alliance, and transplanted professionals who bought
into the townhouse complex were even more vocal in their displeasure. The sounds were
cacophonous, and the cash disbursed for glass and aluminum pilfered from private cans was
often spent on drugs, booze and sex in plain sight.
Soltani saw a bigger picture: the legacy of poor urban planning that had turned a
thriving African American enclave into a destitute landscape pocked by industry. And now,
gentrification and mounting tensions.
He quit his job, bought a camera and became a fixture at Alliance.
Six years later, "Dogtown Redemption," the documentary he created with
co-director and cinematographer Chihiro Wimbush, is in the hands of judges who will
announce this week whether it wins a coveted slot in the Sundance Film Festival.
The duo hopes to spur discussion with an online interactive map on which residents and
business owners can track recyclers' routes and upload their own stories and
opinions.
"It's film as a way to build community," said Soltani, 47. "There are
all these people living at different levels here — sort of like a shattered mirror."
Even before the film's release, the long act of making it would prove transformative
— for subjects and filmmakers: Lives lost. Recovery. Despair. And most of all, deep,
abiding human bonds.
"I love Amir," said Hayok Kay, 59, a South Korean-born former punk rock drummer
whose mental health demons have kept her on the streets for decades. "Because
he's Amir."
::
Soltani studied social and intellectual history at Tufts and Harvard universities, became
a human rights activist and worked as a journalist before landing a Bay Area job here as
Middle East editor for New America Media.
Around the corner from his new home was Alliance, which opened in 1978 — after
redevelopment made its mark.
Freeways that promised connection to San Francisco had surrounded and isolated West
Oakland. The depot at the western terminus of the First Transcontinental Railroad, which
had brought in a flow of Southern job-seekers and cash-flush black porters, was closed.
A vibrant blues music scene died out, along with black-owned businesses that had offered
a path to the middle class.
Alliance, in the neighborhood known as Dogtown, was a stage on which enduring
consequences played out. Soltani settled in to watch and listen.
In mid-2008, he was joined by Wimbush, who, born to a Japanese mother and white father
raised in Kenya, shared Soltani's outsider perspective of urban America.
Where many saw dank and sticky chaos, the pair found the underside of the green economy
and a subculture of enterprise, where recyclers closely guarded routes built on
long-cultivated relationships.
On a recent day, Roslin Brister-Sanders, 56, showed off a heavy ring of keys around her
neck that grant access to garages and gates along the two-mile route she has traced with
her cart for more than a decade — first with her husband, and then alone, after he landed
in jail and died under mysterious circumstances.
"People think we're robbers, stealers, drunks," Brister-Sanders said.
"This film sheds some light on what we do. It's showing that we are all taking
part in society."
::
Because of the heavy load she pulls, Brister-Sanders is the only woman welcome to join
the self-titled "Breakfast Club" that gathers before dawn outside Oakland's
E-Z Liquors. Wimbush, 44, regularly met her there, the cup of coffee she requested
steaming in his hands.
He has taken her to the hospital for bronchial infections more times than he can recall.
"They can be sweet as gold or a pain," Brister-Sanders said of the group.
"They haven't missed one of my birthdays. They always bring me a cake."
Wimbush and Soltani bonded with "Miss Kay," the former drummer, after her
longtime partner — a street artist — succumbed to chronic illness. They tracked her
journey from crippling grief to a stint in a shelter, then back to the streets and,
recently, to newfound companionship.
They bore witness as Jason Witt, known as "the titan" for his monstrous rig,
battled heroin addiction — and found his way back to a grounding childhood discipline:
martial arts.
Then there is Landon Goodwin, 58. Born to a family of ministers, he ended up addicted on
the streets, in and out of prison, "hanging around with people who were in the same
position and same condition."
In lengthy chats, he told the filmmakers he had never lost touch "with that inner
person I really was" but had failed to fulfill his destiny. Soon after, he was beaten
with a lead pipe. But those conversations stayed with him.
"You can't have a film called 'Redemption' where nothing is
redeemed," said Goodwin. "Sometimes people kind of jump-start something
that's in you. I didn't want to die on the streets. I wasn't raised
there."
He entered recovery in Vallejo, and, as Wimbush and Soltani stood by, became an ordained
minister, fell in love and married.
Soltani shared his own stories. When his fictional graphic novel, "Zahra's
Paradise," was published in 2011, Brister-Sanders and Miss Kay both clamored for a
copy. Set in the aftermath of Iran's fraudulent 2009 elections, it tells of the search
by a mother and brother for Mehdi, a protester who vanished into an extrajudicial twilight
zone.
The displacement, grief and trauma experienced by Iranians, Soltani said, resonated.
Still, the closeness with their subjects came as a surprise.
"The way they have shared their stories, it's a tremendous gift," Soltani
said. "The most humbling for me has been realizing that there are no easy solutions,
no easy answers."
::
As the pair scraped for funding, they found a warm reception.
Tere Romo, who oversees the San Francisco Foundation's Bay Area documentary fund,
said judges selected the project for going beyond an exploration of recycling to offer an
intimate look at the humanity of the recyclers and the challenges they face.
The Sundance Institute — which receives more than 1,500 applications a year and funds
about 50, chose it for its focus on "homelessness, addiction, gentrification —
problems facing lots of municipalities," said documentary film fund director Rahdi
Taylor. It was afterward — when she met Soltani and Wimbush — that Taylor said she was so
struck by "the open heart that they have."
Sometimes, she said, where the public and private sectors fail, "artists can succeed
in finding a new pathway to tell a different kind of story, to open a new window for a
different kind of future."
Goodwin put it this way: "I hope it brings attention to some of the homeless people
who are out there who are pearls. You just never know until you get to know somebody what
their potential really is."
lee.romney(a)latimes.com
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-west-oakland-recyclers-20131201,0,753559…