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A matter of life and death

Five Days At Memorial dramatises just how bad it got for a New Orleans hospital after Hurricane Katrina.

- Review by MICHAEL PHILLIPS

DID Dr Anna Pou, a surgeon at what was then known as Memorial Medical Center in New Orleans, get

Sully-ed?

Was she a valiant physician undeservin­g of attacks on her ethical character and crisis management?

Or, in the cruel aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, did she cross every known ethical, medical and legal line?

Five Days At Memorial, the eightpart limited series, dramatises many more questions and real-life characters.

The series unfolds against a larger maelstrom of gutless mismanagem­ent and abdication of responsibi­lity on the federal, state and city levels in the wake of Katrina.

The floodwater­s that breached the levees left so many, betrayed and isolated, to die.

What happened in this particular building – 45 corpses were found days later in the hospital chapel – is both a lament and a warning to those who will face the next Category 5 hurricane.

Warning: While often gripping, the series, covering a nearly twoyear time span, is not the propulsive

Er-style experience promised by the trailer.

The first five episodes, broken down neatly by Day One, Day Two etc, constitute a stark drama of waiting. Waiting for floodwater­s to recede; for power and hope to be restored; for privatised health care administra­tors to do the right thing.

The final three episodes shift gears into the story of how Louisiana Department of Justice officials investigat­ed the events involving Dr Pou (played by topbilled Vera Farmiga) and her colleagues under barely imaginable duress.

What makes Five Days At Memorial worth seeing, in a coldcreeps way, is its emphasis not on nobility or venality but everything in between.

Series creators, writers and (splitting the first five episodes) directors John Ridley and Carlton Cuse aren’t trying to do Katrina: The Limited Series.

They use Memorial as a metaphor for the entire Katrina tragedy.

The series is based on Sheri Fink’s 2013 book Five Days At Memorial: Life And Death In A Storm-ravaged Hospital. (The hospital is now the Ochsner Baptist Medical Center.)

Ridley and Cuse make the necessary character intros speedily and well in episode one. With the hurricane six hours away, Pou is planning for an inconvenie­nce of “three days at the most”.

On the upper floors of Memorial, a separate, for-profit hospital, Lifecare, is overseen by the very pregnant Diane Robichaux (Julie Ann Emery).

Cherry Jones, splendidly honest and dimensiona­lly moving as always, portrays her Memorial counterpar­t, Susan Mulderick.

They’re nominally in charge of disaster preparedne­ss.

At one eerie point in Five Days At Memorial, Mulderick desperatel­y flips through a manual, searching for the hurricane scenario that does not exist.

The storm hits, the floodwater­s rise and then, on Day Two, recede. But then the levees give way, and conditions become a nightmare.

The long-delayed helicopter rescues of patients require many flights of stairs inside the building (the power’s out) and then, on the roof, two sets of rickety metal stairways up to a helipad that has not been used in nearly two decades.

Other key characters, notably Pou’s colleague Dr Bryant King (Cornelius Smith Jr) and registered nurse Karen Wynn (Adepero Oduye), become the viewer’s eyes and ears.

As the show proceeds, the conditions of those stranded in a sweltering, malfunctio­ning hospital mirror what’s happening mostly off camera.

Though hardly the fault of Wendey Stanzler, who directed episodes six, seven and eight, the series as written morphs into a very different affair after episode five.

An assistant Attorney General Arthur “Butch” Schafer (Michael Gaston, excellent) and his Medicaid Fraud Unit colleague Virginia Rider (Molly Hager) learn that some patients did not die of natural causes.

At this point Five Days At Memorial goes into full legal procedural, with a simple mystery to be solved, centred mostly on Pou’s actions.

These later episodes of Five Days At Memorial favour spooky, vaguely Expression­istic flashbacks where we learn what really went down. They’re a bit much.

Now and then, the series blows its budgetary wad on conspicuou­s digital depictions of horrific destructio­n, including the roof blowing off the Louisiana Superdome.

These tactics have a way of distancing, rather than intensifyi­ng, the human drama Ridley and Cuse achieve successful­ly elsewhere.

“Corporate is doing everything they can,” Mulderick reassures a colleague at one point, and the way Jones murmurs that line, you hear tiny warning bells of despair. What an actress!

So is Farmiga, who does everything she can to complicate her character’s motives and actions, even when the series makes up its mind about Dr Pou so we don’t have to. – Chicago Tribune/tribune News Service

All eight episodes of Five Days At Memorial are available from Apple TV+.

 ?? ?? ‘For the last time, stop calling this number. I have no idea where Annabelle the doll is at.’ — Handout
‘For the last time, stop calling this number. I have no idea where Annabelle the doll is at.’ — Handout

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