‘Drop Dead City’ review: Timely doc on 1975 New York City financial crisis
Daily News 1975 headline. | Peter Yost

As President Donald Trump and the MAGA Republicans strive to decapitate the “administrative state,” and cut the so-called “welfare state,” along with other essential services such as Medicare, Medicaid, Drop Dead City chronicles New York City’s struggle against bankruptcy and defaulting on its debt exactly half a century ago. This vivid 108-minute documentary filled with period news clips (from the last year when news stations shot with 16mm cameras) and contemporary interviews with some surviving (if now much older) newsmakers, of course takes its title from what may well be the most infamous newspaper headline in American history: “Ford to City: Drop Dead.” The Daily News, of course, was referring to then-U.S. President Gerald Ford’s 1975 refusal to bail the city out of its fiscal crisis with loans.

The film, which won the Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for film and was the 2024 closing night feature of DOC NYC, focuses on a number of pivotal figures in relation to its subject matter. This includes union organizer Albert Shanker, who served as both president of the United Federation of Teachers from 1964 to 1985 and president of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) from 1974 to 1997, labor leader Vic Gotbaum, who was once president of the largest municipal union (AFSCME) in New York City, Irish-born City Council President Paul O’Dwyer (who reputedly had IRA links), then-Mayor Abe Beame, and investment banker Felix Rohatyn. The co-director with veteran documentarian Peter Yost is actually Rohatyn’s son, Michael Rohatyn, so Drop Dead City has an insider’s (if arguably biased) perspective.

According to the doc, during the period of postwar posterity, New York City was a sort of social democracy where the city provided extensive essential services, from sanitation to firefighting to welfare to healthcare to eventually tuition-free university educations for any resident who graduated from high school, in a highly unionized metropolis where workers received benefits and high salaries. The Big Apple had a bite for everyone, although the “white flight” out of the city to the suburbs dramatically undercut the city’s tax base.

However, not only was New York living above its means, but city officials—including Beame, that “scion” of the Brooklyn Democratic Machine, who’d graduated from Baruch College, and was an accountant who’d been New York City’s comptroller before being elected mayor—were not properly keeping the books. As the film has it, after the city’s spree of deficit spending, when the bills came due in the mid-1970s, the profligate municipality did not have the cash to meet its payroll, bond payments, and other fiscal obligations. 

The riveting film also has brief scenes depicting explicitly socialist organizers resisting the unfolding financial crisis. As someone who was part of the last class of CUNY students who attended college tuition-free (the economic collapse ended that, along with much of New York City’s “social democracy”), and participated in the struggle against the cutbacks, it was gratifying to see glimpses of the leftist opposition included in the hard-hitting documentary. Yet the Left’s solutions aren’t explored.

Police protest, laid off cop holding System Sucketh sign, Brooklyn Bridge, New York City, July 1, 1975 | ABC Video Source/Drop Dead City

A big demand of leftists during this time was to cancel debt service—that is, not paying the interest “owed” to the banks for loans they’d provided to New York City. The documentary does indicate in passing that even if debt service was cancelled, along with other payments, that still wouldn’t have solved the deficit crisis. However, no hard numbers are given, and the filmmakers never consider the option of a “tax the rich” solution for the unfolding fiscal fiasco in New York, where Wall Street is located, along with many banks and moneybags.

Be that as it may, for this ex-“Native” New Yorker who lived through the collapse of 1975, this film is like a time machine, and revisiting that bygone era was a fascinating excursion. However, although Yost and Rohatyn’s nonfiction film is set 50 years ago, the parallels with what’s happening today in America, as social benefits are once again on the chopping block and austerity is on the horizon, the documentary provides a stark cautionary tale that is very timely and relevant. You don’t have to be a New Yorker to love Drop Dead Citya real New York film. 

For more information on where you can view Drop Dead City, go here. 

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CONTRIBUTOR

Ed Rampell
Ed Rampell

Ed Rampell is an LA-based film historian and critic, author of Progressive Hollywood: A People’s Film History of the United States, and co-author of The Hawaii Movie and Television Book. He has written for Variety, Television Quarterly, Cineaste, New Times L.A., and other publications. Rampell lived in Tahiti, Samoa, Hawaii, and Micronesia, reporting on the nuclear-free and independent Pacific and Hawaiian Sovereignty movements. Rampell’s novel about the Native Hawaiian Sovereignty Movement for Indigenous rights, The Disinherited: Blood Blalahs, is being published this year. For info and to pre-order, here is the link.