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The
battle is not over till the fat lady
sings!
Home Depot unwitting star of documentary
Renee DeGross - Staff
Friday, October 7, 2005
PBS has done a documentary on Wal-Mart,
and the movie "Super Size Me" was about
McDonald's. Now comes "Don't Box Me In,"
a documentary about Home Depot.
"Don't Box Me In" chronicles the
unsuccessful battle by activists in
Coconut Grove, a fashionable part of
Miami, to block the Atlanta chain from
building a store.
The 35-minute film depicts what director
Richard Fendelman calls
"development-friendly" politicians
pitted against neighborhood activists
fighting to keep Home Depot's "ugly big
box" out of Coconut Grove.
Fendelman, who has a production company
in the area, said he wasn't involved in
the battle when asked by a group called
Grove First to make the film.
Fendelman said he tried to be neutral
and shops at Home Depots himself.
He said his film will be shown to a
local club, and DVDs will be given away
to build interest.
The film features Home Depot executives
at public meetings, though none gave
interviews; a conversation with Al
Norman, anti-sprawl crusader and author
of the book "Slam-Dunking Wal-Mart"; and
Grove First activists. "Don't Box Me In"
depicts an overdeveloped Miami,
including traffic and stacks of Home
Depot merchandise, against the backdrop
of the artsy Coconut Grove village.
"We can only hope that when the film is
released on DVD that it will include
bonus scenes of all the happy Coconut
Grove residents enjoying their new Home
Depot store," said Home Depot spokesman
Jerry Shields.
The store's opening date has not been
set.
The film could be shown at the 2006
Sundance Film Festival, which gave
Fendelman a one-week extension to file
his application.
But 700 entries will compete for 16
documentary slots, a Sundance official
said.
© 2005 The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution
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