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"The City": significant sequences
and the main passages from
Lewis Mumford's commentary
by Leonardo Ciacci
Made in New York and sponsored by the American Institute of Planners,
"The City" was intended for screening at the 1939 New
York World Fair. It seems that Lorentz, the author of the film's
subject, moved from being film critic to producer and authentic
pioneer of a type: the documentary with a socio-political background,
not then common in the USA as it was in Europe. He went on to create
a successful series of films dedicated to the propaganda of the
New Deal, to which "The City" also belongs (cf. F. Dal
Co, From Parks to the Region: Progressive Ideology and the Reform
of the American City, in G. Ciucci et al., The American City:
From the civil war to the New Deal, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
1979, p.143-291). After The Plow That Broke the Plains, a
1936 documentary on the problems of agriculture, Lorentz received
financing from the government to make The River, a film on
life along the Mississippi, completed in 1937 and which was to receive
the documentary prize at the Venice Film Festival. The success of
its powerful images and its appreciation by President Roosevelt
led to the opening of the US Film Agency, and the launch of many
new projects focusing on themes such as unemployment (with the provisional
title of Ecce Homo), electrification (provisionally titled
Power and the Land) and soil protection (The Land)
(cf. Erick Barnouw, Documentary. A history of non-fiction film,
Oxford University Press, New York 1993).
The subjects dealt with by The City prompted The American
Institute of Planners to sponsor its production and commission Lewis
Mumford, the author of The Culture of Cities published the
previous year (cf. L. Mumford, The Culture of Cities, Hartford,
Brace and Co., New York 1938), to provide the commentary. Mumford
had previously been one of the founding members of the RPAA, the
Regional Planning Association of America, set up in New York in
1923 to support study into alternatives to metropolitan cities and
matters concerning the regionalisation of the country. It is therefore
not surprising to find one of the covers (May 1925) of The Survey,
the RPAA's magazine, portraying a happy family in the fields of
a 'green town' in one section and, above, black smoke from chimneys
hanging over the big city. This was a perfect summarising precursor
of the message that was to be transformed into cinematographic sequences
fourteen years later (cf. P. Hall Cities of Tomorrow, Blackwell,
Cambridge, Mass., 1988, p. 149). Alongside Mumford in the RPAA were
the architects Clarence Stein, Henry Wright and Frederick Lee Ackerman.
Stein and Wright, the designers of Radburn, the green town that
appears in several sequences of the film, had been experimenting
with American applications of the garden city plan produced in England
by Ebenezer Howard (cf. Clarence Stein, Towards New Towns for
America, Cambridge, Mass., 1951) since the early 1920s. Mumford
and Wright, with Albert Mayer, were also the authors of an urban
renewal program in 1934 (cf. A. Mayer, H. Wright & L. Mumford,
New Homes for a New Deal. A concrete program for slum clearance
and housing relief, The New Republic, New York, 1934)
The City, a film dedicated to the big themes of the future of the
modern city, contrasted two prospects for transformation that were
radically different and for this reason offered up to the public
for consideration. The composition of the film is structured on
the weft of two parallel commentaries: the negative one emphasising
the congestion of the industrial city, and the completely positive
one of the government plan for 'green cities'. Indeed, a service
town for a hydroelectric plant built by the Tennessee Valley Authority
was at that time under construction. The film begins with the images
of a 'remembered countryside', 'Sias Farm, 1791, Shirley Village',
contrasted with the deterioration of city life and recognised as
a tradition from which to recover the values needed to construct
the America of the future. The age of rebuilding is here. We must
remold our old cities and build new communities, better suited to
our needs'.
In the life of the small rural community, 'The town was ours and
we were part of it [and] we never let our cities grow too big for
us to manage', asserts the commentary accompanying the opening frames.
From blacksmith's forge to sparks from steel being poured from a
blast furnace, the move is dramatic. In the city the smoke from
factories merges with that of the railway in a crescendo urged on
by the music: 'Machines to make machines. Production to expand production.
Millions, millions, faster and faster'. Squalid working class suburbs
look like a grey, sick desert: 'Don't tell us that this is the best
you can do in building cities'. Unsmiling children play amongst
the filth. In the center, in the city of skyscrapers, crowds of
commuters move following the laws of money: 'the people, yes. The
people, perhaps'. Recurring scenes of accidents, traffic jams and
sirens describe daily life. A life beset by prohibitions that can't
be escaped, even when, during the weekend, a desperate race to the
country inevitably reproduces the same problems as those of working
days.
It is at this point that the second part of the film begins, against
the metaphorical fall of a car down a precipice. The new images
offer an alternative to both the city of chaos and the 'remembered
countryside', promoting the new solid reality of the 'green towns'.
The hydroelectric dam built by the Tennessee Valley Authority gives
an indication of the power of the new project. A shiny steel plane
takes the observation point up to show the layout of the new city.
The images are those of Redburn, New Jersey, planned in 1928. The
narration accompanying the already eloquent images announces that
'Green cities take form. The new city is organised to make co-operation
possible between machines and man and nature. Each has its place.
The sun and air and open green are part of the design. Safe streets
in quiet neiboroughs are not just matter of luck'. Even the distance
from the city doesn't seem to be a problem. Fast highways make for
easy connections. 'A million people spread in a dozen or two of
open cities are free to move about much faster than if they journey
together in an overcrowded center'. In the new cities built in the
countryside, the distances are so short that it is possible to go
home for lunch. The houses, services and community equipment are
combined in a single environment. 'Bringing the city into the country.
Bringing the parks and gardens into the city'. On the screen, children
can be seen playing freely in the green spaces between the houses,
and riding bicycles along special lanes, protected from the traffic.
This time the images are those of Greenbelt, a new city just completed
in Maryland. The town planning criteria shown in these sequences
is definitive: a calculated distance from the city, a maximum, pre-established
size for the town, 'green' protection as the external limit and
separation of the traffic lanes. Principles justified by the commentary
in this way: 'With smaller cities, planned for living, we live in
a bigger world'.
The film then goes back to a comparison between the sick city and
the new cities in the countryside through the drawings of primary
school children. The images alternate while the commentary presses
each spectator to decide: 'You take your choice. Each one [of these
situations] is real, each one is possible.' The appeal is aimed
at adults, while the screen shows images of confidant, smiling children,
with their eye on the future. These are evidently the children of
those who have already chosen to live in the newly conceived towns.
Lewis Mumford made this comment on the project shown in the film:
'Strangely, the most enduring of Roosevelt's early constructive
efforts was the very first on his agenda, his creation of the Tennessee
Valley Authority. This was a foresighted effort to utilize the potential
national resources of a great river basin, capable of generating
electric power sufficient to pass beyond state lines and make use
of underutilized human and natural potentialities. Though it took
years to carry out this project and work out experimentally this
details for distributing both power and social advantages, it for
long remained the most creative American image of democratic social
reconstruction' (cf. Lewis Mumford, Sketches from Life. The Autobiography
of Lewis Mumford. The Early Years, 1982, p. 479).
The comparison made by the film with the political propaganda circulated
by the governs of countries like Germany, the USSR and Italy in
European cinemas is obvious. As is the reference to Die Stadt
von morgen, a social democratic German film of 1930 dedicated
to the popular 'explanation' of the town planning project for the
'city of tomorrow'. In 1938 Mumford had defined the new 'regional
city' (the film's protagonist), as an example '... not merely for
a more efficient industrial order, but for a new social order and
a new type of urban environment' (cf. Lewis Mumford, The Culture
of Cities, cit. p. 324). A few years later, after the War, the
Italian edition of the same text was more explicit: 'Even before
the Second World War the TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) proved
that imagination and audacity are not just the prerogative of a
dictatorship. They are also possible in a democracy that has its
eyes open' (cf. Lewis Mumford, La cultura delle città,
Einaudi, Turin 1954m p. 329).
For
the complete study see the book
"Il cinema degli urbanisti"
by L.Ciacci, previously presented by Planum
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