An eye-opening view of people usually ignored or taken for granted.
Union Square (2003)
Synopsis: UNION SQUARE is a powerful look into the world of homeless heroin addicts that live in UNION SQUARE PARK in New York City. Peer into the lives of seven individuals that allowed the cameras to follow and capture their trials and tribulations while living and hustling on the streets of New... UNION SQUARE is a powerful look into the world of homeless heroin addicts that live in UNION SQUARE PARK in New York City. Peer into the lives of seven individuals that allowed the cameras to follow and capture their trials and tribulations while living and hustling on the streets of New York City. UNION SQUARE captures the true and painful essence of addiction and what seven 20-something year-olds will do to maintain a habit that has them trapped in a vicious cycle. It reveals what they have lost and what they may possibly gain while being in the grips of one of the most powerful addictive drugs—HEROIN. Stealing, shelters, hustling, detox and rehab—all is revealed in the in depth documentary. -- © Alliance International Pictures [More]
Genre: Dramas
DVD Info
Release:
Oct 3, 2006
DVD Features:
- Region (Unknown)
- Keep Case
- Full Frame - 1.33
Reviews
The film attempts to affect an air of dispassionate objectivity, but generally comes across as an exercise in exploitation.
Without a well-delineated political or social framework, Union Square offers little that we didn't already know from, say, The Panic in Needle Park or Christiane F.
To most New Yorkers, the street addicts they encounter daily are nameless and faceless, and Union Square helps to humanize them.
Stephen J. Szklarski's video documentary tracks the lives of seven young drug addicts who live in and around Union Square Park in Manhattan.
The material is vivid and harrowing, although the movie provides little analysis or larger-scale context.
The total effect, of course, is abject sadness as we helplessly watch each enact a unique anti-success story in an inverted reality show.
Its unvarnished look at life in the slow lane exerts a hypnotic fascination.
Like its seven subjects, it can't see past the immediate demands of addiction, and the film becomes a seemingly endless string of scenes depicting shooting up, nodding out and waiting around for the next fix.
Spares no feelings as it peels away the harsh truths of living as a slave to a drug habit.
Brutal, mesmerizing documentary on New York heroin addicts. Not for the faint-hearted.

Top Critic