Available July 12th.

yHomeless? DVD W/ PUBLIC PERFORMANCE LICENSE
yHomeless? DVD W/ PUBLIC PERFORMANCE LICENSE
Item# yHomeless-PPU
$150.00

Product Description

USA 2016 | 87 min. | Color
DVD NTSC | English | Not Rated
All screenings are subject to approval by Cinema Libre Studio.

If you will be charging admission to your screening, please make a note in the comments section at check out and a representative will contact you.

Format: DVD Only Term: Rental - All DVDs must be returned within 10 days of screening or you will be charged an additional $150 per day until the DVD is returned.

For screenings to 500 or more individuals, special arrangements need to be made with Cinema Libre Studio. Contact screening@cinemalibrestudio.com or visit our EDUCATIONAL AND PUBLIC PERFORMANCE INFORMATION PAGE.

If you are looking for the regular DVD: CLICK HERE

If you are looking to purchase the educational use license then CLICK HERE

About The Film

Glen Dunzweiler was faced with the threat of losing his home. Suddenly, a life that seemed reserved only for the mentally ill and drug addicted felt closer than he had ever imagined. This realization led him to question, what is it like to be homeless in the United States?

With only his production equipment, a car, and some bare essentials, Glen set out across America to discover what led people to a life on the street, what daily life was like for them, and what they had to do to survive. In order to better understand the homeless and the service providers he would interview, Glen chose to live virtually down-and-out by sticking to a minimal budget and sleeping only in his car or on a friendly couch when he could find one. Glen quickly experienced the desperation, irritability, and the instability that comes from going without the things we take for granted.

Glen discovers that homelessness is unbiased and could happen to anyone without a support network to fall back on. By traveling the country and speaking with destitute men and women, Glen confirms that homeless people are people first, and deserve not our pity, but our respect and our help.