Man stands in front of a counter full of bagels.
Screenings

Man Push Cart / Chop Shop

  • This is a past program

Part of the UCLA Film & Television Archive’s American Neorealism, Part Two: 1984-2020 screening series. Register at cinema.ucla.edu to attend this in-theater screening.

Man Push Cart

In the wee hours of the Manhattan morning, Ahmad (Ahmad Rzavi) grinds out a living from a pushcart, serving coffee and croissants to the midtown business crowd. Writer-director Ramin Bahrani quickly establishes Ahmad's Sisyphean existence, rolling the cart through the streets in darkness, rolling it back through rush hour traffic, repeat, before gradually pulling back from Ahmad’s labor to reveal the person struggling to get his life back on track. Bahrani’s post-9/11 immigrant story was critically acclaimed on its release and became a watershed film in the re-emergence of neorealism in American independent cinema.

(2005, dir. Ramin Bahrani, digital video, color, 87 min.)

Chop Shop

The Willets Point area of Queens, New York, where auto body shops and scrapyards crowded together in an open-air industrial marketplace—later bulldozed in 2016 for new development—forms the whole of the world for Ale (Alejandro Polanco), a 12-year-old street kid already well-versed in the hustle. Luring customers into a repair shop—where the owner also lets him crash—Ale works to save money, along with his older sister, Isamar (Isamar Gonzales), for a food truck and, hopefully, a way out. Writer-director Rahmin Bahrani surveys this almost post-apocalyptic milieu through Ale’s eyes, a child surviving at the cut throat fringe of late capitalism.

(2011, dir. Rahmin Bahrani, digital, color, 84 min.)