Los Angeles Times

Walk a mile in his shoes

‘The World Before Your Feet’ follows a man determined to traverse all of NYC.

- By Michael Rechtshaff­en calendar@latimes.com

New York has justifiabl­y held a long-standing reputation as one of the world’s most culturally diverse cities. It also packs a surprising amount of geographic­al diversity into its compact 302.6 square miles, as discovered by blogger Matt Green in Jeremy Workman’s enlighteni­ng, life-affirming documentar­y, “The World Before Your Feet.”

One could always get a sense of that collective breadth and scope by taking a highly recommende­d twohour Circle Line cruise around the island’s five boroughs, but 37-year-old Green truly goes the distance — walking his way through 6,000 miles of streets in addition to the various parks, bridges and cemeteries he encounters along the way.

Setting off each day on a different route that might take him to the dense forests of Staten Island, the barbershop-lined streets of the Bronx, or an eerie, desolate Coney Island in the dead of winter, this genial, Anthony Bourdain of pedestrian­s makes for a fervent tour guide.

To pursue his six-yearsand-counting project, Green quit his job as a civil engineer and gave up his apartment, finding temporary room and board across the city as an in-demand cat-sitter while allocating $15 a day for transit fares and homemade meals consisting mainly of rice and beans.

Unsurprisi­ngly, as revealed by former girlfriend­s, including an ex-fiancée who had already mailed out wedding invitation­s, his extreme wanderlust has taken a toll on personal relationsh­ips.

But Green, who supplement­s his expedition­s with a painstakin­gly researched, if not heavily followed blog, isn’t the only one to cover a lot of ground.

Filmmaker Workman, who’s behind him every step of the way without ever getting in the way, allows the city and its colorful denizens to take center stage.

Although not all of them welcome this affable, photosnapp­ing transient with open arms, his encounters with distrust pale in comparison to those experience­d by fellow neighborho­od hiker, Jamaican-born Garnette Cadogan, author of the essay “Walking While Black,” who details the fashion choices he must make in order to not appear threatenin­g or suspicious.

Forgoing a convention­al linear approach to charting Green’s trek, Workman, whose documentar­ian father, Chuck, is responsibl­e for creating many of those cleverly assembled Oscar clip montages, takes some revealing detours, including a trip back to Green’s family home in Virginia that offers potential insights into what makes Matt run.

He also includes a number of intriguing sidebars featuring photo montages of the city’s “churchagog­ues” (old synagogues now occupied by churches as Jewish neighborho­ods have shifted), “haircutter­z” signs in the Bronx and, most movingly, the 9/11 memorials that continue to pop up in various forms across all five boroughs.

None proves more poignant than Tribute in Light, an annual commemorat­ion taking the form of two vertical xenon towers beaming heavenward from near the original site of the World Trade Center.

As beautiful as it is haunting, the image evocativel­y sums up the human spirit and indomitabl­e resilience that Green and Workman seem to encounter around every city block.

“London is satisfied, Paris is resigned, but New York is always hopeful,” observed famed Manhattani­te Dorothy Parker some 90 years ago. “Always it believes that something good is about to come off, and it must hurry to meet it.”

Fortunatel­y for us, Matt Green and his seemingly tireless feet are in no particular rush.

 ?? Michael Berman ?? MATT GREEN, the documentar­y’s subject, sets out to walk all of New York City, six years and counting.
Michael Berman MATT GREEN, the documentar­y’s subject, sets out to walk all of New York City, six years and counting.

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