THE RELATIONSHIP between people and their junk is a curious one. A 2022 documentary called Scrap shows just how oddly intertwined these two things can be.
When the film's director, Stacey Tenenbaum, came across a photo of an airplane graveyard just outside of Moscow, the place's ghostly quality-seemingly frozen in time-led her to wonder what happens to these kinds of things when they are no longer useful.
The film is chockablock with visual pleasure. Viewers float alongside retired trams and peer into the rotting husks of muscle cars spotted with moss and lichen. But a harder message lurks beneath the lilting images: The way back from irrelevance and obsolescence demands work-often the hard, dirty and dangerous kind.
That humans use and then discard endless amounts of stuff isn't exactly news. But how do we interact with what we throw away? The film showcases an alternative approach to the cycle of junking things once they've reached the end of their active life: There is worth in the saddest old hulks of refuse, including a downed plane, a wizened train or an ancient phone booth. In fact, old stuff can be transformed into something not only useful, but beautiful.
Take, for example, the iconic red phone booth, an object familiar to any anglophile. Back in the 1980s, when Tony Inglis, who ran a trucking firm in England at the time, got the contract to remove phone booths that had fallen into ruin, he thought, "We can't just let them go."
So he started fixing them up. Over time, he purchased more than 2,000 of the decommissioned booths and set about resurrecting them: scraping off decades of buckled paint, replacing broken glass, slowly restoring dignity and handsomeness. Now, decades later, the refurbished booths are being put to a variety of new functions everything from miniature libraries to coffee kiosks to defibrillator stations.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2023-Ausgabe von Reader's Digest India.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2023-Ausgabe von Reader's Digest India.
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