Canadaville, USA" documentary paints picture of hope amid disaster
By Nelson Wyatt, The Canadian Press
MONTREAL - Filmmaker Abbey Neidik is glad he stuck around to keep the cameras rolling for his up-to-the-minute documentary "Canadaville, USA."
Otherwise, his ending probably would have been a lot less uplifting. "In the first year, there were always problems," he recalled in an interview. "There were drug problems, there were children being taken away and you could just see there was a general kind of depression that was there.
"We would go there every couple of months and start filming and you would not see anyone on the streets. They're all barricaded in their houses. And I only started to understand that it was the shock of Katrina and losing everything. . . .It took time to heal."
He said in the beginning Canadaville struck him more like Peyton Place, the tumultuous town from the pulp fiction novel of the same name.
But Neidik's film, "Canadaville, USA" is ultimately a story about the triumph of the human spirit and compassion.
Shot over two years, it tells how Canadian auto-parts baron Frank Stronach was deeply touched by the plight of refugees from Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 and created a Louisiana village to give 300 of the poorest disaster victims new starts.
The refugees, who affectionately dubbed the community Canadaville, are given five years of rent-free living and the chance to participate in an ambitious organic farm. Many of them come from New Orleans' tough Ninth Ward and they have a hard time adjusting to their new rural surroundings.
The documentary, to be broadcast Thursday on CBC-TV, tracks several people including Cindy, a single mother with two kids who are taken away from her when authorities learn she is addicted to pain killers.
There's also Shane Carmichael, Canadaville's on-site manager from Toronto, who leads the efforts to get the community up and running and whose efforts have a surprising payoff in the end.
He's the real face of Stronach's Magna International in the film because Stronach is barely seen except at media events.
But probably one of the most compelling stories in the film is that of Kevin and Michelle Johnson and their six children.
Kevin and Michelle both come from troubled pasts - he was thrown out of a third-storey window as a youth by his father, she was raped by her stepfather and thrown out by her mother when she learned of the abuse.
Kevin and Michelle met on the street and have struggled with unemployment, a lack of social skills and brushes with the law as they try to keep their family together. At one point in the documentary, Kevin even violates his probation and takes his family on the run. But even that brings another surprise.
"We both fell in love with them from Day 1," producer Irene Angelico says of the Johnsons. "They screwed up but they kept trying. I think they're a family full of love and they kept at it and they kept it together so they were the most inspiring to the both of us."
Not everything in "Canadaville, USA" is smooth sailing. Besides the ups and downs faced by the people shown the film, there is also the cool reception given to the new arrivals by some of the residents and mayor of nearby Simmesport, which is also plagued with unemployment.
Neidik and Angelico say questions still remain about the role of companies in helping out in such a manner - indeed there was much cynicism initially about Stronach's project - but the filmmakers give the tycoon full marks for his efforts.
"I don't think you can take away from him what he offered," Angelico said. "It was a life raft and it's a new life for a lot of people. They were very clumsy about a lot of things in the beginning but struggled through it."
Neidik added: "This film, it's the story of someone who actually does something."
Canadaville remains a work in progress and one that Neidik and Angelico would like to track, maybe for a feature-length documentary.
"Basically, it took a year-and-a-half to finally get it off the ground," Neidik says of the community. "You could see the change once the farm and the chickens were there. There was a buzz that started. You could feel it in the air."
But would he like to move there?
"If they start building a hockey rink, I'll think about it," he says with a chuckle. "Until then . . . ."
By Nelson Wyatt, The Canadian Press
MONTREAL - Filmmaker Abbey Neidik is glad he stuck around to keep the cameras rolling for his up-to-the-minute documentary "Canadaville, USA."
Otherwise, his ending probably would have been a lot less uplifting. "In the first year, there were always problems," he recalled in an interview. "There were drug problems, there were children being taken away and you could just see there was a general kind of depression that was there.
"We would go there every couple of months and start filming and you would not see anyone on the streets. They're all barricaded in their houses. And I only started to understand that it was the shock of Katrina and losing everything. . . .It took time to heal."
He said in the beginning Canadaville struck him more like Peyton Place, the tumultuous town from the pulp fiction novel of the same name.
But Neidik's film, "Canadaville, USA" is ultimately a story about the triumph of the human spirit and compassion.
Shot over two years, it tells how Canadian auto-parts baron Frank Stronach was deeply touched by the plight of refugees from Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 and created a Louisiana village to give 300 of the poorest disaster victims new starts.
The refugees, who affectionately dubbed the community Canadaville, are given five years of rent-free living and the chance to participate in an ambitious organic farm. Many of them come from New Orleans' tough Ninth Ward and they have a hard time adjusting to their new rural surroundings.
The documentary, to be broadcast Thursday on CBC-TV, tracks several people including Cindy, a single mother with two kids who are taken away from her when authorities learn she is addicted to pain killers.
There's also Shane Carmichael, Canadaville's on-site manager from Toronto, who leads the efforts to get the community up and running and whose efforts have a surprising payoff in the end.
He's the real face of Stronach's Magna International in the film because Stronach is barely seen except at media events.
But probably one of the most compelling stories in the film is that of Kevin and Michelle Johnson and their six children.
Kevin and Michelle both come from troubled pasts - he was thrown out of a third-storey window as a youth by his father, she was raped by her stepfather and thrown out by her mother when she learned of the abuse.
Kevin and Michelle met on the street and have struggled with unemployment, a lack of social skills and brushes with the law as they try to keep their family together. At one point in the documentary, Kevin even violates his probation and takes his family on the run. But even that brings another surprise.
"We both fell in love with them from Day 1," producer Irene Angelico says of the Johnsons. "They screwed up but they kept trying. I think they're a family full of love and they kept at it and they kept it together so they were the most inspiring to the both of us."
Not everything in "Canadaville, USA" is smooth sailing. Besides the ups and downs faced by the people shown the film, there is also the cool reception given to the new arrivals by some of the residents and mayor of nearby Simmesport, which is also plagued with unemployment.
Neidik and Angelico say questions still remain about the role of companies in helping out in such a manner - indeed there was much cynicism initially about Stronach's project - but the filmmakers give the tycoon full marks for his efforts.
"I don't think you can take away from him what he offered," Angelico said. "It was a life raft and it's a new life for a lot of people. They were very clumsy about a lot of things in the beginning but struggled through it."
Neidik added: "This film, it's the story of someone who actually does something."
Canadaville remains a work in progress and one that Neidik and Angelico would like to track, maybe for a feature-length documentary.
"Basically, it took a year-and-a-half to finally get it off the ground," Neidik says of the community. "You could see the change once the farm and the chickens were there. There was a buzz that started. You could feel it in the air."
But would he like to move there?
"If they start building a hockey rink, I'll think about it," he says with a chuckle. "Until then . . . ."