In 2003, I nearly died in a house
fire in Queens , New York . I lived in New York City during September 11, 2001 and
was amazed at the courage of members of the FDNY, but my personal experience
with the department gave me a true appreciation for the work firefighters do. After all, what would we do if they weren't
around to save lives? Thanks to their swiftness, I got out of the house and didn't
choke to death. Watching a finely oiled machine in action is the best PR for a
fire department. Watch them work, and their dedication is clear. Talk to them, and you realize they have hearts equaling the size of the passion they have for the job they do.
It was, of course, an honor when
the producers of the Tribeca Film Festival Audience Award-winning Burn contacted me to get the word out on
Uncle Paulie's World about a screening of the film in Washington State .
Executive producer Denis Leary had been doing the late night talk show circuit
to promote the film a while back, and it was definitely something I wanted to
see and write about. I don't want to
lessen the impact of the film by giving too many details away. What I will say is that whoever watches it
will be changed for life. You will
reexamine your priorities and want to remind yourself every day to say
"thank you" to those around us who give of themselves for the greater
good.
Burn is a documentary that follows the lives of members of the
Detroit Fire Department throughout an entire year. Their experiences aren't
easy, and their department isn't a normal one. Racial tensions and a lack of
jobs changed the face of the city, lowering the city's population from 1.8
million people to around half. That
exodus has left behind 80,000 abandoned structures that are essentially fire
traps, though the majority of the 30 daily structure fires are caused by arson.
That's nearly triple the number of structure fires in Los Angeles --a city of 4 million people. The fires are indicative of a larger social
problem. The majority of departmental funds
are spent to pay the firefighters their modest salaries. Repairs and the
purchase of reliable equipment goes to the wayside.
Throughout it all, the
firefighters love what they do and enjoy coming to work each day. For a firefighter, there is nothing like the
adrenaline of entering a burning building, taking care of business, and saving
lives. They put themselves in dangerous
situations every day, selflessly, but still manage to maintain a
sense of humor about it all.
It was no joke to many of them
when a new executive fire commissioner came to Detroit and suggested that firefighters ignore the
flames and let some of the structures completely burn to the ground. This
seemed like the only way to level the battleground and clean up the city. Since many unknown transients lived in the
structures, the idea seemed absurd, especially to firefighters who are in the
business of saving lives.
Burn is an eye-opening film about real people--real lives--and they
graciously let filmmakers Tom Putnam and Brenna Sanchez into their community to
give an in-depth glimpse into the triumphs and tragedies that take place in inner city
Detroit. Putnam and Sanchez shot nearly 1,000 hours of footage and interviews
to tell a shockingly true, and in its own way, beautiful, well-rounded story.
The film is full of selfless guys
whose stories are compelling and varied. Many grew up in the communities where
they live and work. And one thing connects
them all--a love for the job and the city they see dwindling away,
one fire at a time.
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