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CANADAVILLE,
USA
A film by Abbey
Jack Neidik
Produced by Irene
Lilienheim Angelico and Abbey Jack Neidik
On August 29, 2005, Canadian
billionaire Frank Stronach watches on his TV as water and chaos raged
in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Shocked to see abandoned victims fend
for themselves, while FEMA fumbled over red tape, he decides to command
a private rescue operation. Stronach, chairman of the Magna International
auto-parts empire, begins by whisking hundreds of New Orleans residents
to safety. Then with a purchase of an 800-acre plot of land in sleepy
Louisiana bayou country, he lays the foundations for a bold $7 million
social experiment.
With five years free rent and the aim to produce the "best organic
food in America," Stronach gives 300 evacuees a fresh start and a
chance to escape the vicious cycle of poverty that controlled their lives
long before Katrina hit. Grateful for the effort, commitment and volunteer
work that Canadians contribute, the evacuees affectionately name their
community Canadaville.
But Stronach and his team are not prepared for the problems the residents
face. Many are evacuees from the poorest, crime-ridden districts of New
Orleans. Some have brought the old demons of addiction, abuse and violence
that they suffered back home. Most are also dealing with post-traumatic
stress. And now they are living in bucolic rural Louisiana, far from everything
they've known.
To complicate matters, Canadaville is in a region plagued with
unemployment, and their neighbours in Simmesport do not welcome this influx
of new residents with their big-city problems.
Shot over two-years, Canadaville, USA is produced by the only film
team to be given full and unparalleled access to the community. Told primarily
through the residents' stories and struggles, this compelling and moving
documentary focuses on the survivor's long road to recovery.
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