One evening, filmmaker Theo Anthony noticed an unnervingly large brown rat trapped in his trash can, trying repeatedly but in vain to escape a receptacle specifically designed to contain it.
“I came home, heard this sound and went to my iPhone and started filming,” the Baltimore-based director says of the incident, the basis for Rat Film, his essay on the city's war with its rodent population — and its problematic history of racial segregation.
Rat-plagued city
Brown rats are thought to have spread across the world from China in the Middle Ages and can grow to the size of a domestic cat. They have thrived in America’s garbage-strewn East Coast cities but their relationship with humans is hardly symbiotic: they get food and shelter while we get chewed cables, parasites and the Black Death.
U.S. television channel Animal Planet named Baltimore the third most rat-plagued city on Earth in 2014, behind two other U.S. destinations, Boston and New York.
A post-industrial Rust Belt town built for one million people, Baltimore is actually underpopulated, with large swaths of its housing boarded up and abandoned — making it a paradise for rats. The rodent population swelled from fewer than 10 rats per 1,000 residents in 2002 to 60 in 2009, according to local government figures uncovered by Karen Houppert writing for The Washington Post.
Rat Film invites audiences to see Baltimore’s infestation as a corollary of the urban neglect caused by racist housing policies.
Segregation law
It was the first city in early 20th century America to pass a residential segregation law — later scrapped by the Supreme Court — restricting blacks and whites to certain parts of the city.
“Ain’t never been a rat problem in Baltimore; it’s always been a people problem,” says one of Mr. Anthony’s subjects, a wise and wizened rat exterminator who notes that the critters thrive in poor housing areas.
Fusing old photographs, poetry, 3D simulations and interviews with an eccentric assortment of rodent lovers and rat killers, the filmmaker charts Baltimore’s efforts to confront its pest problem since the 1930s.
His insight is that population control and rat control appeared to be enmeshed in the city’s development, with poor, rat-infested areas “red-lined” by insurers as forever undesirable.
The filmmaker highlights the historical city government practice of denying home and business loans to people living in majority-black neighbourhoods.
City officials, he demonstrates, were using the same language in the 1930s to talk about the “infiltration” of black populations as they do now to talk about rats.