On August 29th, 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast,
killing at least 1,300, destroying over 600,000 houses, and turning
downtown New Orleans into an uninhabitable swamp.
In a compelling
hour-by-hour reconstruction of the ferocious storm, NOVA exposes
crucial failures in preparation and engineering that led to the worst
disaster in U.S. history. The film probes the titanic forces behind
hurricanes and the latest technology for tracking and predicting
them, showing how scientists precisely foresaw the impact of a strong
hurricane on New Orleans a year before Katrina struck. NOVA
investigates the fatal flaws in New Orleans’ levees and the huge
challenge posed by protecting and rebuilding the city. As global
temperatures rise, are killer storms like Katrina a growing
threat?
Hurricane Katrina: The Storm that Drowned a City presents
astonishing storm footage, suspenseful eyewitness testimony, and a
penetrating analysis of what went wrong. Viewers relive the storm
through the eyes of survivors and the stories of top engineers,
hurricane experts, and emergency officials as they grappled with the
arrival of the storm and its traumatic aftermath.
Special DVD
features include: materials and activities for educators; a link to
the NOVA Web site; scene selections; closed captions; and described
video for the visually impaired.
On one DVD5 disc. Region
coding: All regions. Audio: Dolby stereo. Screen format:
Letterboxed.