In New York City’s most quickly gentrifying neighborhoods, a group of fearless residents, activists, and nonprofit attorneys fight corrupt landlords and developers for the basic human right to a home.
Slumlord Millionaire is a feature documentary about gentrification and the housing crisis. The median rent nationwide has surpassed $2,000 per month for the first time in U.S. history. In NYC, the rent in Manhattan is now an unbelievable $5,000 per month and experts predict it will only get worse. As rents increase, some landlords have become more aggressive in trying to get long-term tenants to move out of their homes. They ignore repairs, turn off heat and gas, and do nothing to eliminate vermin infestations. The landlord’s goal is to make the apartment so uninhabitable that residents are forced out and the landlord can deregulate the apartment and turn it over to market rate for a high profit. These actions drive up costs in the already unaffordable housing market, and displace families who make up the fabric of the neighborhood, changing communities forever.
KIDS FIRST! Film Critic Zoe F. comments, “I like the documentary Slumlord Millionaire because it is extremely educational and highlights so many powerful voices. It is a powerful documentary about activism and many brave initiatives and individuals. The biggest thing I learned from Slumlord Millionaire is how landlords can so easily control their tenants.” See her full review below.
Slumlord Millionaire
By Zoey F., KIDS FIRST! Film Critic, Age 14
I like the documentary Slumlord Millionaire because it is extremely educational and highlights so many powerful voices. It is a powerful documentary about activism and many brave initiatives and individuals.
Slumlord Millionaire gives us a view into the lives of families in New York City. It specifically explores the effect of the toxic real estate industry on middle and lower-class people. People, such as the Bravo Family share their story of an unfair landlord, horrible living conditions, and communities broken apart. This is especially true in locations like Chinatown, Brooklyn, and Manhattan.
The biggest thing I learned from Slumlord Millionaire is how landlords can so easily control their tenants. The Bravo family has been in a legal battle with their landlord for 15 years. Nathan Bravo developed asthma because of mold and cockroaches in his house. The Bravo family decided to try to get a law passed that forces landlords to fix these apartments. Then their landlord calls them in an angry fit, telling them that if they were smart enough to get a law passed, then they should just move out. This landlord was also known for being extremely racist to Hispanic families staying in one of their apartments. The Bravo family and one other were treated with the most disrespect due to their ethnicity. Landlords, especially for lower- and middle-class families, have so much power over their tenants. They constantly raise prices of housing, while the tenants’ income stays the same. A landlord determines what kind of conditions their tenants live in. This film explains that there are both good and corrupt landlords. The “good” landlords will have fair prices, showing their care for their tenants. The corrupt landlords will charge unfair prices to their tenants and not fix any damage in the apartment. The reason this is so impactful and important is because NYC is driven by the real estate industry. Most people in New York City have been housing insecure since after World War II. Housing costs have increased unfairly over the years. In fact, one-third of New Yorkers spend over fifty percent of their income on rent. Housing insecurity remains a big issue because, instead of helping people who already live in New York City, big companies are choosing to continue building apartments for middle to high class income people.
Slumlord Millionaire taught me to be more grateful for everything I have. The people whose stories are shared in this film live in horrible conditions. This documentary not only honors and respects those people but also plants a silent seed of gratitude in the audience’s mind. Slumlord Millionaire proposes that housing is a human right. Making money should not be more important than community and comfort. Please be advised that Slumlord Millionaire contains some profanity.
I give Slumlord Millionaire 5 out of 5 stars and recommend it for ages 12 to 18, plus adults. You can watch it on Prime Video, Netflix, Hulu and other streaming platforms now.
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