- New Orleans jazz funerals and second-line parades absorb the pain of death and racism, soaring to transcendent rebirth. But a hurricane and a parade shooting plunge Michael White and Deb "Big Red" Cotton into a search for the city's soul.
- Why do we dance for the dead? To most people, jazz funerals are a mystery. In 2005, writer and videographer Deb Cotton leaves "hard-hearted Hollywood" for New Orleans, and becomes a chronicler of the parading club culture spawned by the legacy of funerals with music. This tradition is carried by the prolific clarinetist Michael White, renowned for playing "the widow's wail" in sorrowful dirges. When Hurricane Katrina hits, White loses everything in the catastrophic flooding. In his struggle to rebuild, White becomes an everyman, embodying the resurrection spirit of jazz funerals. As Cotton follows the parading culture through the aching recovery, while White explores his ancestral roots in the dawn of jazz. The danced-memory of enslaved Africans charges a reimagining of antebellum Congo Square, juxtaposed with the grandeur of European marching bands. With burial pageants as a mirror on the city's history, the film hits a violent turning point at a parade shooting, plunging Deb Cotton and Michael White into a search for the city's soul.
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By what name was City of a Million Dreams (2021) officially released in Canada in English?
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