WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Documentary >

When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts

Watch When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts For Free

When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts

In August 2005, the American city of New Orleans was struck by the powerful Hurricane Katrina. Although the storm was damaging by itself, that was not the true disaster. That happened when the city's flooding safeguards like levees failed and put most of the city, which is largely below sea level, underwater. This film covers that disastrous series of events that devastated the city and its people. Furthermore, the gross incompetence of the various governments and the powerful from the local to the federal level is examined to show how the poor and underprivileged of New Orleans were mistreated in this grand calamity and still ignored today.

... more
Release : 2006
Rating : 8.5
Studio : 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks, 
Crew : Director, 
Cast : Harry Belafonte
Genre : Documentary

Cast List

Reviews

Greenes
2018/08/30

Please don't spend money on this.

More
Dorathen
2018/08/30

Better Late Then Never

More
Chirphymium
2018/08/30

It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional

More
Bergorks
2018/08/30

If you like to be scared, if you like to laugh, and if you like to learn a thing or two at the movies, this absolutely cannot be missed.

More
Mosin Pictures
2013/08/10

I have been studying Spike and his work over the past few weeks. I believe he has done a excellent job on bringing the real people of New Orleans and there experiences to light. I am an aspiring film maker (currently attending Full Sail University, Orlando FL) and although I want to create and be a part of different genre of films, I am also committed to doing projects similar to this. There are many issues and problems that are going on in our country and the world in general that are being ignored. Like Spike I have love for people in general and want to help in any way I can. As a film maker I have the opportunity to do just that and I have every intention to do so. Great Documentary Spike! I really enjoyed the commentary and both hearing and feeling what I saw visually. I would be honored to work with you one day and learn under you. Thank You for another great film!

More
Cam Silver
2011/12/18

This is a fair documentary that shows how storm hit from the preparations to the aftermath. All voices are heard from politicians to ordinary citizens. The film does a really good side of bringing the politicians who were blamed for not doing enough. The politicians story is told of why they acted the way they did, I wish people were interviewed from the federal government. The major government issue of this film is how state/federal rights got in the way of providing help. Also this documentary showed how the state failed in preparing for the storms with the levees. Social issues are explored in the film on how many minorities suffered the most during the storm. The toughest parts of New Orleans were hit the hardest. What this film does is that it takes us through the aftermath with ordinary citizens who lived through this storm. The ordinary citizens provide such a unique perceptive on how the government reacted. I highly recommend this film, it explores great topics such as government responses to natural disasters and race relations.

More
charlessmith702210
2007/08/25

In this very special documentary that Michael Moore would truly love, New Orleans was listening, but not listening enough. The big problem was when Hurricane Katrina was about to slam towards the New Orleans coast; at that point, most of New Orleans' residents thought that the hurricane would go east towards Texas and not hit Louisiana. They were wrong.As Katrina hit the Gulf Waters and strengthened after hammering the state of Florida as a Category 4 storm, the storm grew to the highest scale in the Saffir-Simpson scale---a Category 5. Seeing that hurricane on radar in the Gulf, even though I was no hurricane forecaster, I believe that winds had whipped up to 145 to 160 mph in the worst part of the storm. The air pressure in the hurricane reached about 900 millibars. That means that convective available potential energies in that storm could reach as high as 6,000 joules per kilogram and lifted indices as high as -11. You only get these readings in a very severe thunderstorm.In other words, Katrina was a monster storm that cannot be ignored.On August 28, 2005, hurricane watches were put out throughout the whole Gulf Coast. The mayor of New Orleans told all New Orleans people to evacuate, but some New Orleans residents could not get out. Then the city government made a plan to put all evacuees who could not get out of New Orleans before the hurricane to the Superdome in downtown New Orleans. I saw about 100,000-150,000 people herded in the Superdome like cattle.And even after the storm, things were not better. People were stranded for days. The Superdome got hotter and hotter and some people decided to get out of there. The New Orleans Convention Center did not fare any better. The government did not care for them, and that is why a fair amount of hurricane victims died in the streets and in the waters. And to top it all off, anarchy akin to what happened in south central Los Angeles during the riots of 1991 exploded like a nuclear bomb in New Orleans. Several looters were shot; police kept the destitute and dislocated away from higher ground; and even police who had powers to arrest were unable to do it. One testimony of a Black looter who got shot twice by someone firing a shotgun and ending up with buckshot wounds all over made me so scared, because you only see such stuff in westerns.For some people, the breach of the levee in 2007 that triggered most of the New Orleans flooding, especially those who were at the Gentilly area of New Orleans, caused enormous fears. Some people near the breach of the levee heard explosions, and this was akin to the dynamite detonations of the levee during the last hurricane in New Orleans in about 1962.

More
edalweber
2006/12/03

Spike Lee is certainly not correct about levees being blown,but the truth is even worse.He is certainly nearer to the truth than people who blame "the force of the hurricane".As one who rode out both Katrina and Hurricane Betsy in the same house in Gentilly,it was obvious at the time that Katrina was no worse.The lake levees,which were properly built,though exposed to the full force of the storm,came through unscathed.What collapsed and flooded the main part of the city west of the Industrial Canal were those worthless,cracker box,stage-prop "flood walls" along the drainage canals that folded up and collapsed like cheap card tables the minute the water rose.Besides the Corps of Engineers,we can blame former Mayor "Slimy Sidney" Barthelemy"The Man Who Murdered A City".He deliberately forced out the veteran engineers of the Sewage & Water Board,so that no one would object to those worthless (but profitable) frauds.AND he had the valuable assistance of the alleged "newspaper",the Times Picayune which covered up his criminality. The incompetent stooges that Barthelemy replaced the experienced engineers with not only approved those worthless flood walls that the old engineers knew were disasters waiting to happen,but, still infesting the Sewage & Water Board to this day,insanely dredged the drainage canals in such a way as to remove what little foundations those flood walls had.The 17th St. Canal shows this graphically.This sits astride the parish line.Jefferson Parish engineers refused to allow this lunatic dredging on THEIR side of the canal, which is why only the Orleans side collapsed.A year before Katrina, people living along the drainage canals complained of salt water seeping into their yards, killing plants.To a COMPETENT,HONEST engineer this a clear sign that something was dangerously wrong with the levee foundations.But the Barthelemy "engineers" swept it under the rug,telling people that they were "imagining things".And as for blaming those who wouldn't evacuate,If one thing was proved, it is that evacuating a city this size IS NOT PRACTICAL.New Orleans could and should have been an impregnable fortress against hurricanes.The vast bulk of the misery caused by Barthelemy's Flood was the destruction of the homes,and LIVES of the "survivors",who now have to live,or rather EXIST in this horror.The empty city was picked clean by looters despite the presence of thousands of police and National Guard,which shows that it is the PEOPLE who are the real crime deterrents.Telling people,"Get out, let the hurricane and the looters destroy your homes and businesses,and we will give you sardine can trailers to live in" is typical of the garbage we hear from the government.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now