Produced, Shot & Directed by
Brian Cassidy, Aaron Hillis & Jennifer Loeber
August 12 | 7 pm
Synopsis
Once thriving, a dead mall in upstate New York is now home to a ragtag flea market, living proof that the American Dream is in perpetual decay. Blending verite with a stylized wit, this heartbreaking portrait raises questions about our disposable culture through the unfiltered lives of its eccentric community.
Director’s Statement
In the small New York town of Fishkill, the Dutchess shopping mall had been an epicenter of both commerce and community in the 1970’s. But as the laws of American capitalism perpetuate, however, newer retail stores and shinier malls were bound to steal its crowds and render it obsolete without much fanfare. After theDutchess closed for businesstwo decades later, the flea market began operating in and outside of what we now saw as a gigantic skeleton, just one of the many dilapidated eyesores that litter the country like a graveyard.
We originally began shooting Fish Kill Flea to sustain the memory of the flea market and the unusual neighborhood it had reinvented out of dead space. We learned that the mall was going to be demolished to make room for yet another corporate home-improvement store, the third of its franchise within 12 miles. The vendors and customers were inevitably going to scatter and that particular subculture erased forever, which to us was a fascinating paradox: the flea market would expire, but it never could have existed if the mall hadn’t died first. Furthermore, it’s a sad fact of life that this cannibalistic cycle is destined to repeat itself forever.
So what’s worth preserving? What defines a landmark? And who earns the right to answer these questions? Considering the joys, amenities and special moments the mall once offered, is it all that strange to eulogize “the great palace of commerce?”