By April MacIntyre Aug 22, 2010, 17:53 GMT
Spike Lee's heart-breaking documentary "If God Is Willing and Da Creek Don't Rise" debuts Aug. 23 and 24 only on HBO.
Spike Lee's heart-breaking documentary "If God Is Willing and Da Creek Don't Rise" debuts Aug. 23 and 24 only on HBO. EPA/LARRY W. SMITH
Director Spike Lee appeared solo on panel at the recent television critics association summer press tour and talked plainly about the lack of real leadership and initiatives to rebuild and restore Louisiana, specifically New Orleans and surrounding parishes, and the added insult of the BP ecological disaster which has effectively shut down thousands of small businesses dependant on the Gulf for their livelihood.
Five years after Hurricane Katrina, director Spike Lee returns to New Orleans to see how the ambitious plans to reinvent the Crescent City are playing out in the all-new, four-hour documentary "If God Is Willing and Da Creek Don't Rise" - a saying we learned at the TCA's that Spike's beloved grandmother would say to him whenever the going was tough.
Lee finds a patchwork of hope and heartache in a story that is book-ended by a pair of momentous events — the historic 2010 Super Bowl victory and the disastrous British Petroleum oil spill — that changed the history of America’s most unique city once again.
The film debuts in two parts on Monday, AUG. 23 (9:00-11:00 p.m. ET/PT) and Tuesday, AUG. 24 (9:00-11:00 p.m.), exclusively on HBO.
The documentary continues the story of the rebirth of the Big Easy, as Lee documents the successes and failures in the ongoing efforts to restore housing, healthcare, education, economic growth and law and order to a battered but unbowed community.
“We knew when we finished the first film that the story wasn’t over,” says Lee. “It was clear it would take a long time for the city to get back on its feet.”
Lee and his crew arrived in New Orleans in Feb. 2010 during a new wave of optimism, led by the Who Dat Nation, the community of passionate fans of the NFL champion New Orleans Saints football team. “The mood in New Orleans was great when we got there,” Lee recalls. “They’d just won a Super Bowl. They had a new mayor and people’s spirits were high.”
New Orleanians were also encouraged by a series of legal victories that promised accountability for some of the devastating damage done to their homes by massive flooding during and after the storm. Notably, in Nov. 2009, a federal district court ruled that the Army Corps of Engineers was culpably negligent for poor maintenance of the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet (MR-GO), a major navigation channel, which led to some of the worst flooding after Hurricane Katrina. The ruling paved the way for long-awaited financial restitution.
Amidst the reinvention plans, Lee also uncovered a deep undercurrent of mistrust. Many residents say that recovery efforts mask an effort to transform the city famous for letting the good times roll into an “economic engine” that will benefit only an elite few.
A lack of affordable housing is one of several serious ongoing problems faced by the city’s poor, especially the primarily African-American residents of the devastated Lower Ninth Ward and St. Bernard’s Parish. The four large public housing developments have been shuttered, and rents have soared, with the average fair-market value of an apartment rising from $578 in 2005 to $881 in 2009. Only 38 percent of the private homes destroyed in the hurricane have been rebuilt.
“Some parts of the city are rebuilt,” Lee notes. “But a lot of houses in those areas are in the same condition they were five years ago.”
In many cases, private efforts are stepping into the void. Significant advances are being made by nonprofit reconstruction efforts like Make It Right, spearheaded by actor Brad Pitt, who has committed to restoring homeowners by building affordable “green,” storm-resistant new homes in the Lower Ninth Ward.
Kimberley Polk, seen in Lee's previous film "When the Levees Broke" wracked with grief by the death of her young daughter, used that tragedy to propel herself through nursing school. Katherine Montana Gordon, who evacuated to Houston in 2005, remains in the city that absorbed so many Katrina victims discovering an unexpected lifeline in the Houston school system, which provides specialized classes for her autistic son that were never available to him in New Orleans.
An uptick in violent crime after Katrina has begun to subside and ongoing efforts at police accountability are yielding results. The FBI’s investigations into allegations of brutality and cover-ups in the New Orleans Police Department have resulted in indictments of current and former police officers in connection with a number of incidents, including the notorious unprovoked shooting on Danziger Bridge that killed an unarmed teenager and a severely mentally disabled man and wounded four others.
Lee visits Houston, where an estimated 150,000 New Orleans evacuees remain. The film also looks at other areas along the Gulf, including Gulfport and Biloxi, Miss., where rebuilding has progressed more quickly, at least partly due to what former La. Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco says was an inequity in distribution of federal relief funds. She points out that Louisiana, which suffered 75 percent of the damage from the storm, received approximately the same number of federal dollars as Mississippi, which sustained only 23 percent of the damage.
Just as Lee believed filming was complete, tragedy struck the Gulf once more. On April 20, a deepwater offshore oil rig operated by British Petroleum exploded, unleashing torrents of oil into the Gulf, resulting in one of the biggest environmental disasters of all time. Lee and his crew immediately returned to assess the impact of this latest calamity and capture the reaction of area residents.
“The people of the Gulf Coast feel they’ve been victimized by greed – again,” says Lee. “The Army Corps cut corners and built the faulty levees. Oil companies and gas companies are jeopardizing the barrier islands and the wetlands. They too are trying to cut corners, and 11 people are dead because of it. The people want answers. They want their environment and their way of life to be saved.”
But even in the face of this recent catastrophe, the resilient strength of New Orleans and Gulf Coast residents remains intact, observes the filmmaker. “The story is not over yet,” Lee says. “I’m proud HBO has given me the opportunity to tell the stories of these great Americans and that people will see how strong their spirits are.”
More than 300 people share their stories including La. Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco, New Orleans mayor Mitch Landrieu, former New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin, historian Douglas Brinkley, activist actors Brad Pitt and Sean Penn, Houston mayor Anisse Parker and community organizer Tanya Harris. In addition, longtime New Orleans residents such as Phyllis Montana-Leblanc, Kimberly Polk and Shelton “Shakespear” Alexander, whose compelling testimonies were a key part of “When the Levees Broke,” provide updates on their lives.
HBO playdates for both parts (presented back-to-back): Aug. 27 (7:00 p.m.), 29 (3:00 p.m.) and 31 (9:00 a.m.), and Sept. 4 (11:00 a.m.) and 8 (3:00 p.m.)
Other HBO playdate for Part 1: Sept. 13 (4:10 a.m.)
Other HBO playdate for Part 2: Sept. 14 (4:45 a.m.)
HBO2 playdates for both parts (presented back-to-back): Aug. 25 (8:00 p.m.) and Sept. 3 (4:00 p.m.), 12 (2:00 p.m.), 14 (1:00 p.m.), 22 (8:00 a.m.), 27 (1:55 a.m.) and 30 (11:00 p.m.)
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