
Spike Lee's Reality TV
When the Levees Broke brings
Katrina's devastation into clear and timely
focus
by Larry Blumenfeld
August 15th, 2006 12:34 PM
http://www.villagevoice.com/film/0633,blumenfeld,74179,20.html
Spike Lee stared at another dead body. Cue music. It went
on like that through most of a recent Saturday afternoon.
Outside, at the corner of Terpsichore and Annunciation
streets in the Lower Garden District of New Orleans,
little suggested Hurricane Katrina's devastation. But
inside the Music Shed, the modest recording studio where
Lee was holed up for the weekend, a large-screen TV
freeze-framed the image of another victim floating face
down, then one more bombed-out street. If it was a
relentless reminder of Katrina's wrath, Lee wanted it
that way.
When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts,
Lee's four-hour HBO documentary, was in its final
production stages. Trumpeter Terence Blanchard, who grew
up in the city's Ninth Ward and now lives in the Garden
District, and who has composed the scores for Lee's films
since 1990's Mo' Better Blues, did another take of a
melancholic theme. On-screen, the visual shifted to a
talking head, one of dozens who carry the story forward.
Lee was at the Venice Film Festival when the
hurricane hit last August. He spent days in his hotel
room, transfixed by CNN and BBC images of drowned bodies
and people waving in desperation from rooftops. "I
realized right away that this was an important moment in
American history," he said during a break in
production, leaning on one of the African drums used for
the opening
sequence. "I wanted to make a filmâ?"not just
to document what happened, but as a platform
for the voices of the people I'd seen on TV."
"I'm telling you, it's taken all my energy not
to become a bitter person making this documentary,"
Blanchard said. "I've been looking at all of these
people pleading for help, looking at it every day. And at
the same time that I'm doing this I'm seeing no public
outcry and no president or other official stepping up
with real action."
Having drawn on the experiences of some 100 New
Orleans residents in making his film, Lee was now
offering the city a sneak preview. Some 15,000 free
tickets were snapped up in less than 48 hours for an
August 16 public screening of the first half of Levees at
the New Orleans Arena. HBO will air the first two hours
of Levees on August 21, and the last two on August 22.
The film will
be shown in its entirety on August 29, the anniversary of
the hurricane.
The film opens with a lengthy montageâ?"set
to Louis Armstrong's "Do You Know What It Means to
Miss New Orleans?"â?"of warmhearted Mardi Gras
and second-line-parade footage interlaced with stark
shots of children airlifted from flooded streets, cars
crushed by displaced houses, bodies adrift. We see the
continuity of New Orleans culture and the discontinuity
of Katrina's wake.
Cut to New Orleans mayor C. Ray Nagin at a December
congressional hearing. "We come to you with
facts," says Nagin. "We come to you with
eyewitness accounts."
That's precisely what Lee's film does. Never
camera-shy, Lee nonetheless steered clear of Michael
Moore's filmmaking approach: In fact, Lee is absent
on-screen. There is no voiceover narration. Instead, he
constructs the story through witnesses and other
commentators, with images drawn from major media
coverage, amateur videos, and footage from the nine trips
he and his crew
made to New Orleans.
One potentially controversial element of the
storyâ?"persistent suspicion that levees were
intentionally exploded in some sections to flood the
poorer black sections of New Orleansâ?"is
considered without sensationalism.
Lee raised this possibility during an October
appearance on HBO's Real Time With Bill Maher, mentioning
1965's Hurricane Betsy, when similar rumors surfaced, and
the 1927 floods, when some levees were, in fact,
intentionally blown. "I don't put anything past the
American government when it comes to people of color in
this country," Lee told Maher. Tucker Carlson shot
back that Lee was a "reckless conspiracy
theorist" and that he was "feeding
paranoia." Yet David Remnick raised these same
points in much the same manner in a New Yorker piece
earlier that month. In the film, such suspicion is
considered by residents who "heard a boom" as
well as by John M.Barry, author of Rising Tide, who finds
"too many similarities between 1927 and
Katrina," especially similar failures of the levee
policy.
"Maybe they did, maybe they didn't," Lee
says. "We'll never know because it won't be
investigated. But the flood should not have happened
anyway. The Army Corps of Engineers has said it was their
fault. Somebody should go to jail."
Stories of personal suffering and loss dominate
Lee's film. Phyllis Montana- LeBlanc recalls being told,
in the midst of the flooding, that 911 was not taking any
calls. ("What do you mean?" she shouted.
"I'm fucking dying!") She describes the slow
unraveling of her life as her family was evacuated and
split up in different cities.
Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, who lends both music and
commentary to the film, had told me months ago that
"the black faces on CNN looking for lost mothers and
fathers call up a historical memory of Southern slave
families torn apart." As Blanchard put it, "It
wasn't so much the feeling that the country was saying,
'We don't want you back.' It was them saying, 'We don't
want you,
period.' "
Blanchard has long been the musical voice of Lee's
stories. His was the trumpet behind Denzel Washington's
character in Mo' Better Blues; he even had a cameo in
Lee's Malcolm X. Now, the story being told is, in part,
his. At one point, Blanchard walks through a devastated
Ninth Ward, playing the hymn "Just a Closer Walk
With Thee." At another, he escorts his mother back
to her home, where he was born and raised. She breaks
down crying in the doorway when she realizes everything
inside has been destroyed, right down to the family
photos.
"It's weird to have a very personal moment
like that videotaped," Blanchard says. "I had
mixed emotions about Spike using it because it was my
mom. I'd never seen her like that. But I thought people
need to see what we're going through, not just to hear
about it secondhand or get a politician's reaction to
it."
Levees makes devastating use of memorable public
moments: President Bush's comment "Brownie, you're
doing a heck of a job"; Mayor Nagin, during a call
to Garland Robinette's radio show, imploring the federal
government to "get off your asses and do
something"; CNN's Soledad O'Brien confronting FEMA's
Michael Brown about the thousands stranded in the
Convention Center ("Why are you discovering this
now? It's been five days"). Here, linked, they form
a
detailed indictment.
"Our government has done a lot of things in a
sneaky way," says Lee. "But all this was
blatant, no camouflage: 'We don't care.' "
Lee's film deftly tells a story on a personal
level: We grasp the human cost of this crisis in ways
simply not conveyed through headlines and soundbites. And
beyond analysis of government inaction and faulty levee
policy, Lee forcefully reminds us that the culture of New
Orleansâ?"the music and food, patois and attitude
we celebrate as our nation's soulâ?"is imperiled.
Initially, HBO and Lee had planned Levees as a
two-hour, $1 million project. "But as I got into
it," Lee says, "I realized that the scope of
this story demanded more." HBO doubled the budget
and airtime. "And even that's not enough," Lee
says. "The movie doesn't end with a 'to be
continued,' but the story goes on."
Many critics wondered aloud whether or not Oliver
Stone's World Trade Center arrived too soon. Timed to
mark the anniversary of the hurricane, Lee's Levees bis
just in timeâ?"not so much a commemoration as a
wake-up call.
"There's a thing called Katrina fatigue,"
Lee says. "It's going to be a year now, and people
need to move on; we've got wars and whatever else to
think about. But the people in New Orleans and the Gulf
region can't afford to be forgotten."
I caught trombonist Glen David Andrews, who appears
in Levee's final scene, leading the Treme Brass Band on a
Sunday night at Vaughn's, one of the city's best-loved
holes-in-the-wall. In between sets, he looked me in the
eye and spoke with pride about the many musicians in his
family. But his gaze and his voice lowered recalling two
days in the Superdome following the storm, and
six months "in exile," in Houston. He's back in
New Orleans now, living in a FEMA
trailer.
The day before, Andrews was at the Music Shed to
work on the film's ending. It's a mock New Orleans jazz
funeral, a traditional way to mark the passage from one
realm to another in anticipation of rebirth. The Hot 8
Brass Band led an empty casket on wheels marked
"Katrina." Andrews held his horn at his side
and sang a familiar hymn: "When I die . . .
hallelujah, by and by, I'll fly away." But on the
final verse, he altered the lyric: "New Orleans will
never go away."
Lee was concerned that the last line was buried. He
sent Andrews back in for
a voiceover.
"I want everyone to hear that," he said.
"Like a declaration?" asked Andrews.
"Yeah," Lee snapped back. "A
declaration."
|