The World Before Your Feet (2018) Poster

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8/10
A Peculiar, yet Beautiful Story of New York
JustCuriosity1 April 2018
The World Before Your Feet was well-received in its world premiere at Austin's SXSW Film Festival. It is the strange story of 37-year-old Matt Green who dropped out of normal life to begin a project of walking approximately 8000 miles of every street, park, beach and cemetery in New York City. He has chosen to be intentionally homeless - staying with different friends - so as to pursue some sort of massive performance art project of exploring and photographing every block of the massive city. The documentary is beautifully filmed and really is, in part, a tribute to the beauty and complexity of the organism that is that most remarkable and complicated city. The film is entertaining and beautiful.

The central conundrum of Mark Green's journey is never really answered. I get the feeling that Green is either running away or running towards something, or perhaps a little bit of both. I'm not sure he really understands his own "Forrest Gump"-like journey. I hope the walker eventually finds the direction he wants to travel with his life. Perhaps the film maker should have asked some questions about Green's mental condition since his behavior seems to be somewhat irrational. Recommended for those open to the highly unconventional.
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8/10
A truly interesting document of places and the man who finds them
Quinoa19847 December 2018
In case you needed definitive proof how *safe it is in New York City in this decade, look no further. This doesn't have necessarily the most top notch or artistically ambitious direction (the cute score and reliance, maybe over-reliance, on drones for those BIG shots), but damn if this isn't one of themost fascinating documents of the human spirit in a long time. You learn enough about the guy, Matt Green, to understand but at the same time not fully understand why he's doing this. That may sound off, but you don't need to know his full back story; a few key details about a younger brother, a bike accident, and two ex's are enough.

What makes it a subject worthy of cinematic exploration is really just... Seeing him walk. Sometimes he interacts and talks with the locals, other times he tells us a fact about something, like a tree that is the oldest in New York City, or landmarks in cemeteries that we take for granted or even the first birth control center from 1910's. Like the Mister Rogers documentary this year, the movie is really about human connectivity and how , if you're open to what's out there and are genuinely curious, the World isn't such a bad place.

* at least if you are white and man, but still I think my points can still be valid here.
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9/10
Quite Fascinating
larrys36 September 2019
I really like documentaries like this, as I find them quite fascinating. In this case, the camera follows Matt Green, with clips from his 8,000 mile trek walking the streets of the 5 boroughs of NYC, over a 6 year period.

Green is a former civil engineer who disliked what he was doing and made a decision in his life to pursue what he really loved to do. Following a walk across America, he embarked on the NYC walk, filmed and directed by Jeremy Workman, whose doc "Magical Universe" I also found to be very fascinating.

Green is an engaging guy and his interactions with the New Yorkers he meets along the way brings forth their support for him and their curiosity, with only a few being suspicious or even hostile. His visits to NYC cemeteries, parks, wall murals (many commemorating the heroes and victims of 9/11), even vacant land left barren for years after projects never got off the ground, and so much more just showed me how much I missed having lived in NYC for over thirty years.

Green takes the information he garners very seriously and does research to learn even more about what he's come across during the day. He meticulously posts his daily walks on his blog each night, as well.

Overall, just a most interesting and engaging film, but realizing that it may not appeal to everyone,
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9/10
An informative and often inspiring film
howard.schumann2 April 2019
As a boy growing up in Washington Heights, Manhattan, I spent many weekends walking the streets of New York, particularly the Bronx which I walked almost from one end to the other. My small effort, however, pales in comparison with the accomplishment of 37-year-old Virginia native Matt Green who has been walking every street in New York's five boroughs since 2011. No stranger to adventure, in 2010, Green walked across the U.S. from Rockaway Beach, New York to Rockaway Beach, Oregon, a journey of 3100 miles that took five months.

Directed and photographed by Jeremy Workman ("Magical Universe"), son of Oscar-winning documentarian Chuck Workman ("Precious Images"), and produced by Jesse Eisenberg ("Now You See Me 2"), Green's New York odyssey is documented in The World Before Your Feet, an informative and often inspiring film that captures the pulse of the city that never sleeps.Matt's hundreds of photos, meticulous research, and essays about interesting sites are a treasure trove of New York City lore and perhaps an essential guide for every future tour of New York City.

Workman followed Green for three years, a journey that, when completed, will add up to more than 8,000 miles if you include the parks, bridges, cemeteries, and beaches as well as the hidden corners and swamps that he traversed. While the film does not closely examine the character of each neighborhood he visited, or explore the contrast between the lives of the well-to-do and those living on the margins, it is still an impressive trip and Matt is an outgoing and engaging host who has done his homework on the city's odd characteristics and historic sites. Though he does not refer to himself as being homeless, he is dependent on friends for places to stay and on those who need a cat or dog sitter which he seems to have an inbred talent for.

Having saved some money, Matt claims that his spending is limited to $15 a day and his meals often are limited to rice and beans. We follow Green as he visits the oldest (over 400 years old) and tallest tree in the city, a historic building that for a short time in the early twentieth century served as a birth control clinic run by Margaret Sanger, numerous 9/11 posters and murals, barbershops that contain a "Z" in their name, and former synagogues that became churches when Jewish residents moved to other parts of the city. We also visit the grave of Harry Houdini and colorful characters such as Charles "Mile-a-Minute" Murphy who tested his notion that he could travel a mile a minute directly behind a Long Island railroad train.

We visit with his supportive parents and two of Matt's past girlfriends who seem wistful about the obsession that drove a wedge between them and ended their relationship. Along the way, Matt meets a cross-section of New York's 8.6 million (2017 census) residents: Working people, children in the playgrounds, people just walking on the street, or hikers who have similar goals. We meet Jamaican Garnette Cadogan who talks about how he has to sanitize his image as a black man to appear non-threatening, for example, he wears glasses, always carries a book, and stays away from identifying ethnic apparel such as "hoodies." We do not learn very much about Matt's motivations but we do know that he was a civil engineer who became tired of sitting behind a desk and felt that life was passing him by.

We also know from The World Before Your Feet is that he and his brother were involved in life-threatening events that became the catalyst for Green to recognize the impermanence of all things and shift his focus to being present to each moment. What ultimately is driving Green may be unknown, even to him, but we can get a hint of what motivates him by considering the words of Chris McCandless, an American hiker who set off to test if he could survive alone in the wilds of Alaska, "The joy of life," he said, "comes from our encounters with new experiences, and hence there is no greater joy than to have an endlessly changing horizon, for each day to have a new and different sun." For Matt Green, his new and different sun has become a daily experience of spiritual awakening, an awakening that he is now able to share with the world.
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10/10
A Journey For Everyone
beai-787899 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Filmmaker Jeremy Workman has the "Eye". Like Herzog, Morris and Broomfield, Workman sees for so many of us who simply either don't care, or don't dare to look deeper into a world all of us share...from an eccentric neighbor, ignored by his fellow citizens for most of his life as in MAGICAL UNIVERSE, to a treasure-trove of sheer wonders which lay just a few feet beyond us all...if we only dare to take a few steps and look...this is THE WORLD BEFORE YOUR FEET.

Following Matt Green's personal journey to walk every street, sidewalk, alley and footpath through the 5 boroughs of New York City - an adventure covering approx. 8000 miles -- the film is both understated and startling. Green is you and me, and everyone we know, along with every stranger we pass-by every day. He is thoughtful, curious and likable; someone anyone would enjoy knowing, enjoy having a conversation with. Matt Green embodies how we feel deep down about ourselves...that we have more to give, that something larger is out there, larger than we've ever seen. Something that transcends opinion and division and routine.

Green, a highly-educated professional who turned his back on a 6-figure income career to walk an easy-pace throughout NYC, plotting a course which has him walking in daylight and darkness, fair weather and winter blizzards, encounters what can, at the end, be only described as fellow human beings. There are few interactions which one would find either 'intense' or potentially 'dangerous'; Matt Green is sincere and disarming, and even the most confrontational people - like a man who is incensed at Green taking pictures of his home - come to understand within seconds of the encounter that Green is no threat...ending with a smile, handshake and hug. Within SECONDS.

To his credit and testament to his film-making acumen, Jeremy Workman is virtually invisible in this project. The viewer is never aware of Workman's presence or direction or even his voice...in spite of interviews with Green's family, former girlfriends and fellow sojourners. Workman takes care to ensure this is the story of Matt Green himself and in so doing, tells the larger story about everyone who views the film.

THE WORLD BEFORE YOUR FEET is a lesson for all of us, presented as a travelogue, of sorts. But it is much, much more. It is quietly uplifting and left open-ended for those of us yet to begin our own journeys.
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10/10
Excellent film.
mrothacher16 December 2018
This film is a beautiful look at why our humanity to one another is important. We can see the world best at ground level!
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3/10
No need
MaverickV28 May 2023
This is the irony of human life. Bored, looking for something new, something different all the time and now that has lead us, specifically in the western culture, to a place where people trying to be different and authentic but in reality are creating another selling material to the masses!

If you have walked and seen things in whatever place and you are a true Warrior who has observed and learned from life you want make a doc out of it! You will cherish and live those moments as they come. But under the disguise of artistic fervor you are only creating another consumeristic product for the ever lost souls to sit and consume and feel classy! And that clearly defeats the purpose.

So look within and try again. My two cents to the director, don't try to act smart and document everything which is the new age norm. Live those moments, observe and be aware and keep to yourself.
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