Documentary Feature (PBS, NETFLIX)
city of trees
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An institutional copy of the film is now available for purchase through our educational distributor, Cinema Guild.
ABOUT THE FILM
Since 1990, nonprofit Washington Parks & People has tried to reduce poverty and violence in Washington, D.C. neighborhoods by improving parks. At the height of the recession, the organization received a stimulus grant to create a "green" job-training program in communities hardest hit. They had two years to help unemployed people find jobs and care for parks in their neighborhoods.
Steve Coleman, a grassroots environmental activist who directs the organization, must hire 150 unemployed residents to plant several thousand trees and provide training in the soft skills required to get a job. For Charles Holcomb, the paycheck offers a chance to give his newborn daughter the life he never had. For Michael Samuels, the job training is a first step forward after a drug conviction marred his employment record. For James Magruder, the program offers a chance to prove that his neighborhood roots position him as an unsung leader.
What sounds like a simple goal — putting people back to work by planting trees — becomes complicated by community tensions and a fast-approaching deadline before the grant money runs out. Filmed in an unflinching and compelling verité approach over the course of more than two years, City of Trees thrusts viewers into the inspiring but messy world of job training and the paradoxes changemakers face in urban communities everyday. 76 min, USA
CREDITS
Directed by Brandon Kramer
Produced by Lance Kramer
Edited by Edwin Martinez
Cinematography by Ellie Walton
Consulting Producers: Gordon Quinn, Justine Nagan, Katy Chevigny
A film by Meridian Hill Pictures
In Association with Kartemquin Films
and Magic Labs Media
ACCOLADES
“City of Trees is honest. It is real. It explores the messy truths embedded in all fights for environmental and social justice.”
— Van Jones, CNN political commentator, NYTimes bestselling author
"Beautiful and engaging. City of Trees offers a great ‘new narrative’ to counter the conventional story of social and environmental justice.”
— Thomas Walker, PhD Director of the Environmental Studies Program, Goucher College
"An expertly crafted, intimately rendered, verité documentary."
— G Chesler, Director of Film & Video Studies Program, George Mason University