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When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts Reviews

Mar 21, 2020

Living in Panama City after Hurricane Michael gave this a specific feel for me. All these post-storm stories and issues, with the government and FEMA and the media…it's all so familiar. So little has changed. In one of his most reserved (though still fully emotional) films, Lee gives a lovingly in-depth look at the effect of race and class during the fallout of a natural disaster.

Jan 29, 2020

A look inside the lives of people who went through Katrina and how it's impacted them. Most of the interviews are first-hand accounts of what transpired... the good and the bad (mostly bad). It's sad to look back now and see all the mistakes that took place re government help for the victims and for the city itself. I had always thought Kanye was an idiot for his comment on national tv re Bush hating black people, but I view it through totally different eyes and I fully agree with what he did/said. Most of the government big shots failed miserably in how they handled the crisis, mostly due to putting their self interests before the victims' (ie Bush, Cheney, the governor of Louisiana, the head of FEMA, etc). I leave Mayor Nagin off that list bc I believe he tried as hard as he could to get help for his people, the citizens of New Orleans. Spike Lee does a great job of taking clips/interviews and telling a coherent story from them. It's extremely long at over 4hrs, but this issue needed that much time to be explained properly.

Sep 23, 2019

"And Brownee, you're doin' a heck of a job." When the Levees Broke is a 4 hour documentary by Spike Lee about the before, during and aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Debuting on 온라인카지노추천 August 16 2006, LESS than a year after the actual hurricane itself! How he put together a movie this detailed so quickly is crazy to me. I heard Bowling for Columbine took 3 years to put together from start to finish. This is an outstanding documentary. 4 hours and it goes by like that *snap*. It's one of those documentaries like OJ: Made in America or Making a Murderer where length is not an issue, the way the material is put together is just impossible to put down. It's interviews involving nearly every echelon of the people involved. Interviews with the mayor of New Orleans, the governor of Louisiana, the medical examiner of New Orleans, journalists covering Katrina, etc. And of course loads of interviews with survivors of the hurricane and the people who have to deal with the mess.... because the federal government sure wasn't in a hurry. And there's even some celebs interviewed who had a part in the events such as Sean Penn who took a canoe to personally go after survivors and Kanye West who said live on 온라인카지노추천 "George Bush doesn't care about black people." Would have liked to get Mike Myers take on that moment... I was expecting this to be extremely depressing as would make sense given the severity of the events. And at times it is. At times it's even shocking beyond words. I don't think I'll ever forget the images of bloated corpses that were left to rot in the sun in the streets of New Orleans. However it's a welcome relief to the proceedings that Spike Lee doesn't make this documentary without a certain sense of humor. Spike Lee doesn't crack wise... except one moment where he's asking a guy about the guns he had in his house in New Orleans and as he lists them Lee asks "Were you looking for Bin Laden?" But the "humor" mainly comes from the interviewees themselves. People just trying to tell their stories and can't help but be entertaining when they do. Phyllis Montana Leblanc is a citizen who's featured very prominently in the documentary, telling her stories of her experience losing everything and fighting to get it back and CERTAINLY not holding anything back and you know Spike Lee was sitting across from her going "Oh man, this is good stuff." I got nothing for complaints. Aside from POSSIBLY waiting a little longer to see how the situation in New Orleans progresses... but he could always do a follow-up, I suppose. This is some of Spike Lee's finest work.

Mar 1, 2019

The story of Hurricane Katrina striking New Orleans and the aftermath told by many, many voices.

Feb 28, 2019

Very moving and educational, but very one-sided view of this crisis. Would loved to have heard from more people in government, more about why the city was so underprepared. Would loved to have heard about the economics. Again, very biased viewpoint of a very complex disaster.

Sep 12, 2017

The movie is too long and factually challenged. The positives are the great soundtrack and the personal tales of tragedy. But when Mr. Lee goes off the deep end and claims that the levees were blown up by the government the movie turns into a work of fiction and should be rated as one. On that front, the movie deserves the lowest rating. It is a shame that Mr. Lee's racism and intolerance have come to dominate his movie making skills. As a filmmaker, Mr. Lee is a great talent but when that talent is polluted by misguided hatred it diminishes his films.

Dec 31, 2015

It would be much easier to take Spike Lee seriously of he didn't spend so damn much time over playing the obvious. Race.

Oct 13, 2015

Spike Lee's masterpiece of a documentary. The definitive film account of the disaster that befell New Orleans. Essential viewing.

Aug 31, 2015

another fuckin lost review-ty flixter-assholes!!!!!!!

Aug 29, 2015

No sé si HBO retransmtirá este tremendo documental (de tres partes) de Spike Lee sobre el huracán Katrina el 2005. Deberían, porque es una obra maestra del cine documental demostrando que lee, cuando toma la cámara para documentar lo hace de manera excepcional. El documental muestra con toda su crudeza el racismo cristalizado de la sociedad norteamericana y la pasividad denigrante del gobierno de G. W. Bush ante la catástrofe que este año cumple 10 años. La ciudad de la música New Orleans inundada hasta desaparecer producto de la negligencia y del abandono.

Jan 16, 2015

Spike Lee did a great job showing what the media and others tried to hide. This documentary was sad and shocking but needed to be shown. Nobody can keep it real like Spike Lee!

Super Reviewer
Sep 14, 2014

I thought this movie did a brilliant job of depicting just how much Hurricane Katrina ruined the lives of so many New Orleans residents. I couldn't believe everything I saw - truly heartbreaking and difficult to imagine.

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Super Reviewer
Jun 20, 2013

Spike Lee insisted that we watch all 4 hours, 15 minutes without a break at the Film Festival. We obliged even though it was eventually broken up over 5 nights on PBS. I derived nothing from the "uncut" version but such an epic still deserves praise in telling the tale of those who's lives were changed due to government neglect.

Jun 9, 2013

Paste Magazine top 25 of decade #7

Sep 15, 2012

Everyone should see this movie as it chronicals the injustices and carelessness of the U.S. government. What happened in New Orleans is a tragedy.

Sep 2, 2012

Exceptionally executed doc on the chaos and heartbreak of severity of nature and uncaring federal govt. potent and important, tough to swallow

Sep 1, 2012

The first of Lee's 2 docs on Katrina. Exhaustive and emotionally exhausting. A must watch contribution to American history.

Aug 15, 2012

A lot of stuff you likely already know about a horrific tragedy, but well-organized and shared in excruciating detail. Powerful on many levels.

May 11, 2012

A profound detailed account of the events leading up to Hurricane Katrina and the breaking of the levees and the devastating aftermath along with the indifference of the Bush Administration towards the people of New Orleans. This documentary is a testament to what really happened and it cannot be hidden and it cannot be sugar coated and it cannot be glossed over by the people who did nothing to help until weeks into the damage. Through film footage of people in the water, in the super dome, on the streets in wheelchairs, dead bloated bodies floating around or on street corners and through interviews with survivors the devastation of what happened smacks you in the face. Many people are interviewed including the Governor of Louisiana, the Mayor of New Orleans, Harry Belafonte, Winton Marsalis and many many former New Orleanans. This film puts our modern greedy anti-social programs Neo-Liberal political and economic system to shame. It really shows what happens when only money talks and the little people are expendable. More so when the little people are not white.

Apr 14, 2012

wow. this left me speechless. i cried throiughout most of it. to see people being treated like this and nothing being done, there's a spot in hell for everyone who done wrong during and after katrina.

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