High on Crack Street: Lost Lives in Lowell
High on Crack Street: Lost Lives in Lowell
PG-13 | 08 August 1995 (USA)
High on Crack Street: Lost Lives in Lowell Trailers

Documents 18 months in the lives of three crack addicts in Lowell, Massachusetts.

Reviews
Nonureva

Really Surprised!

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GazerRise

Fantastic!

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Comwayon

A Disappointing Continuation

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Francene Odetta

It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.

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tommywhite-29528

This documentary showed you an insight into a subject that is not normally covered by mainstream television. I believe that this documentary shows you a true insight into the life's of people addicted to crack and it's effects. This documentary is fantastic and I believe that is shows the true side to addiction and why people must avoide it.

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Vlad 1

I love this doc...HBO made some awesome docs at one point under the moniker of America Undercover. These days they don't make too much of anything it seems. There seems to be a short-supply of good doc ideas. I am all about Hookers and Crackheads and serial killers.Come-on get fine in 2009...bring back these kind of documentaries...I need to live vicariously through these crack-heads. I can't quit my job and start smoking crack like I was Janet from another planet (remember that lovely lady from this doc).This doc has everything you could possibly need a doc on crack addiction to have. Its got ex-fighters! Its got crack addicts trying to hold down jobs! Its got crack addicts losing jobs and losing loves!Yes was a piece showing my love for "Crack Street" and also a piece about why HBO needs to come up with more docs.

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paulgeaf

While the other commenter got it right about this being a great documentary, I am almost insulted by the way he is so flippant about this film. This is one of the most, in fact THE most emotion-wrecking, harrowing, saddening documentary I have ever watched. In my earlier days I used to move around places, living on the road, playing guitar etc. This lifestyle brought me into areas and situations not unlike the main premise of this film: In and around 'druggies' and living on the lowest rung of the ladder. I saw so many things, met so many people from freaks to weirdos to the worst drug addled morons you could imagine and yet, this film brought the true reality of the situation to me as if for the first time. It opens your eyes to what it is truly like for the individuals that have ended up being 'those druggies' that everyone knows of or might even have known at some point in their life. I was shocked that it affected me, after all I have seen and places I've slept, etc...yet I had -as I suspect most people do- just glossed over it and never really noticed the disintegration of the human condition as is presented to the viewer of this film. At the start you are not concerned for these people. You have the usual blinkers on and will most likely look at them with a sneer whilst considering switching the film off and doing something more worthwhile. Then, keep watching of course, you are taken in by the subtle and blatant situations and conversations of these three addicts. the pain and screams behind their eyes is regularly apparent throughout. You empathise at times. You get angry at them too. In effect, this film is so powerful because you become so involved that you really do care for these people by the end. You want them to clean up. You want them to do well. I would never laugh at this movie or describe it as a train wreck. I wouldn't want to watch such 'heavy' stuff very often either but I think it is good to be made aware of someone else's reality, especially if it is as common and cursed as the crack problems of the world. It wouldn't harm you to take a real look at it and see how stripped of everything a human can become - by their own making. It is profound. If ever there was a way of showing kids that taking (certain) drugs can do them untold harm, this movie is it. I wouldn't recommend showing it to young kids but, if my kid ever was suspected of taking any drugs (higher than weed I mean) then I wouldn't hesitate in showing him this movie. In fact I think I WILL show it when he is about 12 or 13.This is a simple documentary with a basic camera following subject approach with the odd questioning from the cameraman/woman. It is probably the best documentary you will ever watch. Unmissable.

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neverscoconnas

This documentary was very good. After watching, it struck me as often a waste of energy for one to spend exhaustive amounts of time writing fictional, sad movie plots while such dreck is naturally begotten form everyday human exchanges, right outside our doors. (Probably because no would believe the truth('less they saw it), being stranger than fiction.) Of course "High on Crack Street" is not clever, or expensive like a Hollywood script. But the film is, its subjects are way better for being unpretentious. Hollywood movie scripts are often over-the-top with the deliveries of their truths, their summations. This film told of three hopelessly lost adults who somehow, despite themselves, left little glimmers of hope behind for the viewers: babies, innocents. As a good documentary should, it fills one with the horror and awe of reality; that which cannot be synthesized by a green screen or rehearsals.

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