Plot Summary
"Kill the Poor" is the story of Joe Peltz (David Krumholtz), a young man in 1980s New York, who buys into a squatter tenement in the Lower East Side neighborhood where his immigrant grandparents first settled, hoping to make a life for his new wife Annabelle (Clara Bellar) and the baby they have on the way. From the start, the former tenants of the apartment, and heads of "the corporation" that run the co-op, warn Joe and Annabelle that living in the building will be more than they bargained for, and that their relationship may not survive. Joe's Uncle Yakov (Cliff Gorman) is constantly reminding him that this "war zone" is not his grandmother's neighborhood anymore - there are junkies sleeping in his grandfather's old tailor shop, the building where his mother was born is now a vacant lot, you can't even find the synagogue, and the corner bodega has been shut down for selling human meat. But this apartment is all they can afford, and Joe is determined to make it work. As Joe struggles to keep himself and his marriage together, the building's problems begin to take over his life: the never-ending "board meetings" about whose responsibility it is to sleep in the doorway to keep the junkies out; the constant debate about how to get rid of Carlos (Paul Calderon), a bully who refuses to pay rent because he lived in the building before everyone else; the hoodlum antics of Carlos' teenage son Segundo (John Budinoff); grungy goddess Scarlet (Heather Burns) bed hopping her way through all of the male tenants, from underground artist Spike (Larry Gilliard Jr.), to home boy Negrito (Otto Sanchez), to part-time grad student/political activist Butch (Zak Orth); and drag queen Delilah (Damien Young) keeping everyone abreast of the latest gossip. All of the simmering tensions in the building come to a boil when a mysterious fire erupts in Carlos' apartment, and Joe, now President of "the corporation," is assigned the task of dealing with it. "Kill the Poor" is a rueful and darkly comic tale about the quest to achieve the American Dream, on the Urban frontier.
Credits
Director
Screenwriter
Rotten Tomatoes Movie Reviews
TOMATOMETER
25%- Reviews Counted: 8
- Fresh: 2
- Rotten: 6
- Average Rating: 5.3/10
Top Critics' Reviews
Rotten: This lukewarm riff on gentrification and its discontents resurrects the low life and tough times of Alphabet City in the early 1980's.
Rotten: Can utopian ideals survive such a mugging by reality?
Rotten: A movie with more character than narrative, it's a showcase for the actors, but the storyline could have used some urban renewal.
Rotten: KILL the Poor is sort of a poor man's Rent - - minus the music and the AIDS - - and much blander than the title would have you expect.
Customer Reviews
Especially Good Screenplay
An usually well-written movie about a group of people living in a formerly abandoned apartment building in a dangerous area of New York. This film does a really good job interweaving flashbacks and the present, and leads to an exciting and surprising ending. I also thought the performances were very specific and interesting to watch, with lots of room for the development of different characters. DEFINITELY worth watching.
Great
Well written... great direction... moving story
Must see
This is an amazing film. It has the uncertain timeline of Memento, the overlapping character stories of Snatch, and a sense of urban dark comedy that has to be seen to be believed. It's a mystery, it's a fractured romance, it's a strangely compelling story about a building and its people. Do yourself a favor and see it.
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