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The Battle of Brooklyn

Genre:
Documentary feature

Directors:
Suki Hawley and Michael Galinsky

Producers:
David Beilinson, Michael Galinsky, and Suki Hawley

Associate Producer:
Isabel Hill

Editing:
Suki Hawley

Director of Photography:
Michael Galinsky

Additional Photography:
Jonathan Barkey

Total Running Time:
N/A

The Battle of Brooklyn explores the poorly understood phenomenon of eminent domain abuse. A feature-length documentary from filmmakers Michael Galinsky, Suki Hawley, and David Beilinson, this film investigates how real estate developers, local government, community activists, and the media have clashed over the largest single-source development project ever proposed in New York City. Widely known as the Atlantic Yards project, this undertaking has for the past four years been a major source of contention as local residents resist a billionaire developer’s attempt to use eminent domain to seize their homes and businesses. Done in the name of “development,” schemes such as this one eviscerate private property rights and make a mockery of the Fifth Amendment--and yet they freely exploit lucrative taxpayer subsidies, easements, and tax abatements.

For more than four years, Galinsky, Hawley, and Beilinson--partners at the Brooklyn-based film company Rumur Inc.--have filmed the people and events orbiting a plan to build sixteen skyscrapers and a sports and entertainment arena in central Brooklyn. Closely following a local instance of a global phenomenon, The Battle of Brooklyn turns the bitter fight over the Atlantic Yards project into an opportunity to explore how eminent domain stories evolve in the media landscape. Freedom depends upon the free flow of information. But when, as in this case, competing, vested interests are all working to shape the story to serve their own ends, it is not at all certain that those who most need the facts have access to them. As much about the American media system as about politics, constitutional rights, and real estate, The Battle of Brooklyn asks two pressing, interlocking questions: “How has eminent domain abuse affected the lives of Brooklyn’s citizens?” and “Can we fairly say that information is flowing freely when the facts surrounding situations such as the Atlantic Yards project are so poorly understood by the communities they affect?”

 

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