As tornadoes and floods dominate the summer headlines, one filmmaker is claiming that one of the worst natural disasters in American history was anything but natural.
On Friday, “The Big Uneasy” opens at the Varsity Theatre on Franklin Street. The film stresses that the same artificial failures that intensified the damage of Hurricane Katrina are still present in New Orleans.
Harry Shearer, the film’s director and a resident of New Orleans, is a comedian famous for his voice acting on “The Simpsons.” He stepped away from his comedy roots to show what he believes were the main sources of damage in the Katrina catastrophe, including faulty designs by the US Army Corps of Engineers, he said.
Recently, the Corps completed a levee system designed to protect the city from a once-in-a-century storm, said Rick Luettich, director of the University’s Center for the Study of Natural Hazards and Disasters.
But even this system is inadequate, Shearer said.
“The pumps never passed their tests even when the standards were continuously lowered to try to make them pass,” Shearer said. “They still didn’t pass. They were installed anyway.”
The film follows three individuals — two of whom investigated the causes of the 2005 flooding. The third is a whistleblower in the Corps in charge of installing the pumps in the new system.
Shearer said he had had enough of the media perpetuating the hurricane as a natural disaster, and decided to take the film on the road as a way to raise awareness with local media around the United States.
“I decided to make the film in October of 2009 when President Obama came to New Orleans and told the town hall meeting that the flooding was a natural disaster,” Shearer said.