The Big Uneasy

2010
7.2| 0h30m| en
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Almost five years ago, a disaster struck New Orleans. The media said it was a natural disaster primarily affecting poor black people. On both counts, the media was wrong.In his feature--length documentary The Big Uneasy, humorist and New Orleans resident Harry Shearer gets the inside story of a disaster that could have been prevented from the people who were there

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futhark30 The film's central argument is portrayed clearly and effectively throughout, discussing the role the Army Corp Of Engineers had in the flooding after Hurricane Katrina. It was convincing and informative, drawing attention to an interesting element of the disaster I personally was not familiar with.At the same time, the material avoided being dry or overly technical, offering an infusion of the New Orleans character in the presentation, the occasional splash of dry humor, and a deeply personal element as it went into the lives and unfortunate outcomes of those who offered evidence in the making of this movie. That last element additionally was personal enough to remind me of those I've known over the years that embody an unrelenting dedication to their ideals despite the consequences.Viewing it, I was attentive as the evidence mounted at a constant rate throughout the picture, and drawn in to the personal stories of those who were involved in the events to transpire.
kvolou Thirty minutes into Harry Shearer's film, the Big Uneasy, it is clear what Shearer sought to do with this film.His goal in Uneasy? To cut through a pile of facts, lies and half-truths and get to the bottom of one of the biggest debates in our country's recent history.Was the devastation of Hurricane Katrina the result of a monster storm no city could ever prepare for? Or was it the result of a rogue federal agency making up the rules as it went along and ignoring their own experts and their own science? As you might have guessed the answer is the latter.But before you get to the crux of the matter, told convincingly by respected engineers and a key whistle-blower, you get the best yet video graphic explanation of just where and when the city began to flood.The how and why comes later.The first 15 minutes of this film should be part of any college course that studies why Katrina was so devastating. The balance of the film, sans a few odd editing decisions that actually distracted me from the message, builds point by point a case for the obliteration of the Corps of Engineers.Shearer does to the Corps in this film what mainstream media did to FEMA, he paints the agency as a caricature. His humor, in a very Mr. Burns kind of way, is conveyed with a dry wit that leaves defenders of the Corps stuttering and stumbling, reaching for an explanation when clearly the one explanation there is they would be fired for uttering.Shearer's film is a true journalistic effort, a documentary that gathered facts first, then drew conclusions later. In other words, this is no Bowling for Columbine.While visually the film will not engage you in the same way that Spike Lee's If God Is Willing' does, it is every bit as journalistically sound, if not more so.Shearer's film is a tell-all of the highest Hollywood order, only in this case those being called out aren't beautiful people with stars on the Walk of Fame, but heretofore no-names whose failures merit their own wall of shame.It is a must see for anyone who loves New Orleans, who loves honesty and loves good journalism.
winnie-h-robinson I wish every American could see this movie! I want to thank Mr. Shearer for spending his own money to make such an enlightening film that presented straightforward scientific fact while it also pulled at your heartstrings.This was the clearest explanation and illustration of the hour-by-hour floodwall breaches and the structural causes of the breaches that I have seen. And I have read and seen a lot about it post-Katrina! The film brilliantly outlined the Corps' decades of incompetence that led to New Orleans flooding. The film also beautifully articulated why it's so important for this country to care about what happens to New Orleans – for all the cultural AND economic reasons.I really appreciated the opportunity to learn about all the potential there is to save New Orleans and the wetlands – it's not too late if we act now. The visions of what the city could be if we utilized Dutch engineering were beautiful and so much more logical than what the Corps is currently constructing. But I fear there is little hope that those in charge will ever have the intelligence to utilize the Dutch resources. But one small step to educate the country is to have everyone you know see this movie when it comes out on DVD!
carol joynt (ThePauls) Caught an early screening of "The Big Uneasy" tonight. It opens nationwide August 30th. Harry Shearer goes deep into the causes of the Katrina flooding with engrossing interviews with the major whistleblowers, who collectively pointed out that the floods were the result of shoddy work by the U.S. Corps of Engineers, dating back to long before Katrina. This is a film with clear cut good guys and bad guys, and hits all the bases of how the floods happened, how the aftermath was dealt with (or not), the backstory on what caused the failures of the levees, the govt spin, and the professional costs to those who bravely investigated the causes and made public what they learned. Good New Orleans atmosphere. And a memorable moment with Sen. Vitter, of all people. Is very well done. Good for Harry. He took his passion for New Orleans, his journalistic skills and political smarts and made them into something.

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