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When the Levees Broke (2006)
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Reviews Counted:26
Fresh:25
Rotten:1
Average Rating:8.1/10
Runtime: 4 hrs 16 mins
Genre: Television
Synopsis: With a runtime of over four hours, this HBO-produced Spike Lee documentary is the definitive word on Hurricane Katrina. Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005, causing the levees that had... With a runtime of over four hours, this HBO-produced Spike Lee documentary is the definitive word on Hurricane Katrina. Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005, causing the levees that had previously kept the city from flooding to burst, which led to death, destruction, and homelessness on an alarming scale. Lee carefully plots the buildup to the hurricane, using many of the key figures in the city--such as mayor Ray Nagin and local radio show hosts--to outline the warnings given to residents. The film then covers the hurricane itself, showing gut-wrenching pictures of dead bodies and people pleading to be saved, before it settles into a lengthy discourse on the government response to the tragedy. Celebrities such as CNN's Soledad O'Brien, Sean Penn, and Harry Belafonte all appear, but Lee mainly focuses on the words of those who somehow made it through Katrina and lived to tell the tale. The majority of those people are highly critical of the Bush administration for its poor response, attributing this to the fact that the bulk of the residents affected were African-American. A powerful and important piece of filmmaking, WHEN THE LEVEES BROKE is an eye-opening account of a catastrophe that could so easily have been avoided. [More]
Starring: Kathleen Blanco, Ray Nagin, Al Sharpton, Harry Belafonte
Starring: Kathleen Blanco, Ray Nagin, Al Sharpton, Harry Belafonte, Wynton Marsalis, Kanye West, Terence Blanchard, Soledad O'Brien
Director: Spike Lee
Director: Spike Lee
Producer: Sam Pollard, Spike Lee
Composer: Terence Blanchard
Reviews for When the Levees Broke
Despite capturing many heartbreaking aspects of the disaster, this is essentially an overambitious mess which ultimately fails to convey effectively the scale or scope of the ongoing tragedy.
The same didactic instincts that sometimes mar Lee's fictional filmmaking serve him well as a documentarian and eulogist.
Spike Lee's monumental look at Katrina is richly detailed and realistically complex.
It's the depth and weight of Freeman Jr's or Michael Wright's or Phyllis Leblanc's words, the anger and sadness behind them, that surge forth here, sinking the political elite's murderously empty promises.
Do the flaws diminish Levees? To a degree. But the story Lee tells is so powerful, so important, that the lapses aren't a reason not to pay heed to what this passionate film has to say.
It's not necessarily the drama inherent in these stories that moved some to tears -- and it's possible that some audiences won't recognize the restraint Lee exercised in rendering them -- it's the heartbreaking matter-of-factness.
In this golden era of documentary filmmaking, When the Levess Broke is among the very best films of the past year, fiction and non-fiction alike.
Surely the most magnificent and large-souled record of a great American tragedy ever put on film.
...what should have been a searing, powerful documentary generally comes off as a rough cut that's desperately in need of some judicious editing.
The film asks many questions, implies answers for the easier ones, but ultimately concludes that some are simply beyond answering. Those are the questions posed in stories of incalculable human heartbreak.
It’s an honest, fair and unflinching look at one of the greatest, and saddest, natural disasters to hit our shores.
Even more than Do the Right Thing, until now Lee's major achievement, When the Levees Broke is simultaneously his most searing and topical movie and the one most assured of enduring.
[The film] presents a poignant picture of official blunders and personal loss, and provides important national lessons if another threat this size hits an American city.
Lee makes a convincing case that, compared to 9/11, this is the far worse disaster.
Charged with profound sorrow, galvanizing outrage and defiant resolve.
Latest News for When the Levees Broke
August 18, 2008:
New Katrina Doc Continues a Tale of Survival ![]()
Relatively few of them have reached the screen, but a number of films examining the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina have been made -- including Sundance grand jury prize winner... More...
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