Farewell Oak Street

June. 15,1953      
Rating:
7.8
Trailer Synopsis Cast

This documentary presents a before-and-after picture of people in a large-scale public housing project in Toronto. Due to a housing shortage, they were forced to live in squalid, dingy flats and ramshackle dwellings on a crowded street in Regent Park North; now they have access to new, modern housing developments designed to offer them privacy, light and space.

Kate Reid as  Welfare Woman
Lorne Greene as  Narrator

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Reviews

Evengyny
1953/06/15

Thanks for the memories!

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Wordiezett
1953/06/16

So much average

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Fairaher
1953/06/17

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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Bergorks
1953/06/18

If you like to be scared, if you like to laugh, and if you like to learn a thing or two at the movies, this absolutely cannot be missed.

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maydom04
1953/06/19

Just watched this online.I have always been interested in Toronto and it's history. I had seen it once before, about 1970 in a high school "social studies" class.The main thing that struck me, apart from the obvious difference between the old and new Oak Street, is how societal standards and attitudes are always changing.Here we see the creation of Regent Park, a perfectly fine and functional place to live, much better than what existed before, and yet just 40 odd years later, it is dismantled, at great expense, in the name of a "better" design!New architecture and design cannot solve problems, people do.The community members, with the help of the Police , need to weed out the bad apples and punish them, so that law-abiding people don't have to live in fear, otherwise the same problems will persist, regardless of design.

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