All the Walls Came Down

Witness resilience and rebirth as a community rebuilds post-devastation. Perfect for fans of heartfelt dramas and community-driven stories.

Genres: Documentary

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All the Walls Came Down

Short Film202539mEnglishDocumentary
6.1
User Score
IMDb
Director: Ondi Timoner

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Overview

Provides a personal and heartrending chronicle of the aftermath of the fires that devastated Los Angeles, including her own Altadena house. Yet, the wreckage of a neighborhood is fertile ground for new friendships and energies. Slowly, this diverse community begins to rebuild, reliant on help from neighbors and friends.

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Featured Comments/Tips

The wildfires in Southern California in January 2025 definitely warrant a documentary. However, the execution in โ€œAll the Walls Came Downโ€ is not very effective. The short doc feels weirdly unfocused. Instead of zeroing in on one angle or at least following a clear narrative thread, it jumps back and forth. As a result, hardly any of the questions viewers might have while watching the doc get answered. Therefore, I'd say the film is mostly a missed chance to say something meaningful about the disaster.

Featured User Reviews

If you saw this year's โ€œLost Busโ€ then youโ€™ll know the fires we are talking about here, and with over fifty square miles of devastation left in the wake of a conflagration started by some dodgy electric cables, this introduces us to some of the families trying to rebuild their lives from the ashes of areas including Altadena in Los Angeles. Understandably, many of the contributors are angry here and so blame is being attributed to the authorities, the power company, the emergency services and there are allegations abounding that not only were the predominately African American communities neglected at the time, but that there are now land grab operations occurring to prevent many of the folks whoโ€™d lived in these communities for decades from being able to afford to return. Insurances policies and (reverse) mortgages arenโ€™t always helping, and government is taking itโ€™s own sweet time to establish how it can help and the extent of itโ€™s liabilities - homelessness and foreclosures are becoming more common. This is maybe one of the few films that actually attempts to travel with the after-effects of a natural disaster (albeit a mankind initiated one), but rather than focus on the causes of the fires and offer us some sort of cohesive assessment of the disaster and what could come next, this all too readily resorts to a disparate collection of news footage, home movie photos and angry campaigning against โ€œtheyโ€. There are no meaningful contributions from the authorities to explain just what happened or to address the allegations that there were deliberate strategic decisions made to sacrifice some areas to protect others - and if that were to be true, then to justify those decisions. Clearly there is a great deal of frustration amongst the dispossessed, but I didnโ€™t think this really did much more than offer them a media opportunity to vent their respective spleens.

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