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Book Cover
Streaming video

Title Dead when I got here
Published [San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming, 2016

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Description 1 online resource (3 video files, approximately 72 min.)
Summary 880-01 Compassion, pathos and life affirming redemption are discovered by a man as he manages a mental asylum run by its own patients in Juárez, Mexico. The seeds of hope profoundly brought to life by his daughter in LA who thought him dead, finding him during the making of this timeless film. Infested with gangrene and unable to walk, Josué was mentally deranged, his malnourished body punctured by decades of drug abuse. Police casted Josué out of the deadly streets of Juárez into the desert and dumped him in a mental asylum run by its own patients. Assisted by patients employing empathy as the only means of survival, Josué transcended certain death by discovering compassion in his darkest hours. Six years later, Josué manages the asylum. Now it is his job to give drugs to the sick; to help them walk; to assist in recovering from the same trauma he experienced while living in the streets of the world's most violent city. 120 patients negotiate madness with compassion in spite of the charnel house that lies beyond the asylum walls. These untouchables have made their own promised land. Their asylum from the madness outside. Josué visits the demolished house he inhabited with fellow drug addicts, murderers and thieves in Juárez. He's told that his old friends are now dead and his brothers refuse to see him. Josué rallies his new found family of patients. They burn effigies in Juárez to exorcise the trauma from the streets they were ejected from. Attempting to reconcile his broken history, Josué dreams of his estranged daughter in California - last seen 22 years ago. He asks the film maker to look for his daughter. Pictures are posted on the internet. Josué and his daughter make contact and agree to meet. The itinerant father knows he cannot explain his absence. Perhaps forgiveness can lead to a new beginning. Having reunited with his own flesh and blood, Josué continues to live and work in the asylum. The long shadows of trauma cast by murder city are a burden he now confronts with new vitality. Directed by Mark Aitken, Executive Produced by Charles Bowden
880-01/(Q Compassion, pathos and life affirming redemption are discovered by a man as he manages a mental asylum run by its own patients in Ju©Łrez, Mexico. The seeds of hope profoundly brought to life by his daughter in LA who thought him dead, finding him during the making of this timeless film. Infested with gangrene and unable to walk, Josu©♭ was mentally deranged, his malnourished body punctured by decades of drug abuse. Police casted Josu©♭ out of the deadly streets of Ju©Łrez into the desert and dumped him in a mental asylum run by its own patients. Assisted by patients employing empathy as the only means of survival, Josu©♭ transcended certain death by discovering compassion in his darkest hours. Six years later, Josu©♭ manages the asylum. Now it is his job to give drugs to the sick; to help them walk; to assist in recovering from the same trauma he experienced while living in the streets of the worldђ́ةs most violent city. 120 patients negotiate madness with compassion in spite of the charnel house that lies beyond the asylum walls. These untouchables have made their own promised land. Their asylum from the madness outside. Josu©♭ visits the demolished house he inhabited with fellow drug addicts, murderers and thieves in Ju©Łrez. Hеђ́ةs told that his old friends are now dead and his brothers refuse to see him. Josu©♭ rallies his new found family of patients. They burn effigies in Ju©Łrez to exorcise the trauma from the streets they were ejected from. Attempting to reconcile his broken history, Josu©♭ dreams of his estranged daughter in California ђ́أ last seen 22 years ago. He asks the film maker to look for his daughter. Pictures are posted on the internet. Josu©♭ and his daughter make contact and agree to meet. The itinerant father knows he cannot explain his absence. Perhaps forgiveness can lead to a new beginning. Having reunited with his own flesh and blood, Josu©♭ continues to live and work in the asylum. The long shadows of trauma cast by murder city are a burden he now confronts with new vitality. Directed by Mark Aitken, Executive Produced by Charles Bowden
Notes Title from title frames
Event Originally produced by Tacit Films in 2015
Subject Asylums -- Ciudad Juárez (Mexico) -- Mexico
Asylums -- Patients
Drug addiction -- Rehabilitation
Rehabilitation.
Mental health -- Patients
Medical rehabilitation.
pardons.
Medical rehabilitation
Asylums
Rehabilitation
Genre/Form documentary film.
Documentary films
Documentary films.
Documentaires.
Form Streaming video
Author Aitken, Mark, film director
Bowden, Charles, producer