
When Spike Lee premiered Red Hook Summer at Sundance, media seemed to disregard everything he had to say, save for a short diatribe about how Hollywood doesn’t understand how to depict African Americans in film. His co-producer and co-writer James McBride wrote a thoughtful essay on the subject that appeared on Lee’s 40 Acres.com website, which is part of Lee’s 40 Acres and a Mule film company. I just caught up with it, and though it worth repeating. Lee’s 1986 film She’s Gotta Have It was, along with Steven Soderbergh’s sex lies & videotape and a few others, a seminal film that helped author the independent film revolution that is personified by Sundance.

It’s a shame that Lee hasn’t gotten his due as a great American filmmaker and that he has been shut out by studios. I think his momentum was harmed when he took a hard stance against Warner Bros in not cutting his near-masterpiece Malcolm X, and his brilliance as a director continues to be overshadowed by the misperception that he is the “angry African American.” I interviewed him once, and found that he is much closer to the playful and often hilarious on-camera presence captured in the Dan Klores-directed docu Winning Time: Reggie Miller Vs. The New York Knicks. You’d think he would be treated at Sundance like an icon, the way that Soderbergh would if he returned to Sundance. Lee’s controversial film didn’t get a great reaction at Park City but I think it will sell for distribution by next week. Here is McBride’s observation:
BEING A MAID
By James McBrideLast night, President Obama, our first African American President, delivered his third State of the Union address. On that same day, the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences nominated two gifted African American actresses, Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer, for Oscars for playing maids in The Help. This is 73 years after the first African American to win an Oscar, Hattie McDaniel, garnered the award for the same role – as a maid, and a slave maid at that, winning the Oscar in the Best Supporting Actress category on Feb. 29, 1940.
And here we are, in the year of our Lord, Jan 25, 2012. Maybe I’m getting old, but the irony of this is too much. Or perhaps I’ve heard this song before. In the 1970’s, when I was a freshman at Oberlin College, my white friends and I used to sit up and talk about racism and solving society’s problems all through the night until the sun rose. Not much good came from these talks, the least of which is I hoped to get laid, which rarely happened. But on those cold nights, I was convinced that when I walked out of college, racism would be just about finished. Instead, it smashed me across the face like a bottle when I walked into the real world. Now, 33 years later, I find myself talking about the same thing I talked about when I was a college freshman.I have no take with Ms. Davis and Ms. Spencer. They’re outstanding actresses. But the nomination of these two women by the Hollywood community 73 years after Hattie McDaniel won for the same role speaks for itself. As co-writer and co-producer of Spike Lee’s newest film “Red Hook Summer,” and his previous feature film “Miracle At St. Anna,” I have a clear eyed view of what the cultural display of African American life means to hearts in Hollywood, a land of feints and double meanings and as tricky to navigate as anything inside the Beltway. I wish someone had told me this when I was a freshman at Oberlin.
America is a super power not because we make the biggest guns. We’re a superpower because our culture has saturated the planet: Levis, Apple, Nike, Disney, Coke, Pepsi, McDonald’s, Jazz, Rhythm n Blues, Rock ‘n Roll, and Hip Hop. Our culture dominates the world far more than any nuclear bomb can. When you can make a person think a certain way, you don’t have to bomb them. Just give them some credit cards, a wide screen 3D TV, some potato chips, and watch what happens. This kind of cultural war, a war of propaganda and words, elements that both Hollywood and Washington know a lot about, makes America powerful beyond measure. The hard metal of this cultural weaponry, much of it, emanates from the soul of Blacks, the African American experience in music, dance, art and literature.
But this kind of cultural war puts minority storytellers – Blacks, Asians, Latinos and people of color – at a distinct disadvantage. My friend Spike Lee is a clear example. Three days ago, at the premiere of Red Hook Summer at The Sundance Film Festival, Spike, usually a cool and widely accepting soul whose professional life is as racially diverse as any American I know– lost his cool for 30 seconds. When prompted by a question from Chris Rock who was seated in the audience, he blurted out a small, clear truth: He said one reason we did Red Hook Summer independently was because he could not get Hollywood to green light the follow-up to “Inside Man” – which cost only $45 million to make and grossed a whopping $184,376,240 million domestically and worldwide – plus another $37 million domestically on DVD sales. Within minutes, the internet lit up with burning personal criticism of him stitched into negative reviews of “Red Hook Summer” by so-called film critics and tweeters. I don’t mind negative reviews. That’s life in the big leagues. But it’s the same old double standard. The recent success of “Red Tails” which depicts the story of the all black Tuskegee Airmen, is a clear example. Our last film, “Miracle At St. Anna,” which paid homage to the all-black 92nd Division, which fought on the ground in Italy, was blasted before it even got out the gate. Maybe it’s a terrible film. Maybe it deserved to bomb. The difference is this: When George Lucas complained publicly about the fact that he had to finance his own film because Hollywood executives told him they didn’t know how to market a black film, no one called him a fanatic. But when Spike Lee says it, he’s a racist militant and a malcontent. Spike’s been saying the same thing for 25 years. And he had to go to Italy to raise money for a film that honors American soldiers, because unlike Lucas, he’s not a billionaire. He couldn’t reach in his pocket to create, produce, market, and promote his film like Lucas did with “Red Tails.”
But there’s a deeper, even more critical element here , because it’s the same old story: Nothing in this world happens unless white folks says it happens. And therein lies the problem of being a professional black storyteller– writer, musician, filmmaker. Being black is like serving as Hoke, the driver in “Driving Miss Daisy,” except it’s a kind of TV series lasts the rest of your life: You get to drive the well-meaning boss to and fro, you love that boss, your lives are stitched together, but only when the boss decides your story intersects with his or her life is your story valid. Because you’re a kind of cultural maid. You serve up the music, the life, the pain, the spirituality. You clean house. Take the kids to school. You serve the eggs and pour the coffee. And for your efforts the white folks thank you. They pay you a little. They ask about your kids. Then they jump into the swimming pool and you go home to your life on the outside, whatever it is. And if lucky you get to be the wise old black sage that drops pearls of wisdom, the wise old poet or bluesman who says ‘I been buked and scorned,’ and you heal the white folks, when in fact you can’t heal anybody. In fact, you’re actually as dumb as they are, dumber maybe, because you played into the whole business. Robbing a character of their full dimension, be it in fiction or non fiction, hurts everyone the world over. Need proof? Ask any Native American, Asian, Latino, Gay American, or so called white “hillbilly.” As if hillbillies don’t read books, and Asians don’t rap, and Muslims don’t argue about the cost of a brake job.
There’s nothing wrong with being white. I’m half white myself and proud of it. There isn’t a day passes that I don’t think about my late white Jewish mother and the lessons she taught me about humanity. But bearing witness to this kind of cultural war over the course of a lifetime will grind a man or woman down in horrible ways, and that’s my fear. I remember as a young saxophonist, just out of Oberlin, standing at a tiny jazz club in West Philadelphia watching the great jazz tenorman Hank Mobley in his last days, sick, broke. It was a jam session, and he strode onstage to reach for the magic one more time, to conjure up the power of his younger years when his mighty tenor powered Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers and Miles Davis when those guys were the toast of Europe. Drink destroyed him. He was helped onstage by the kind musicians around him, and he stood there swaying, barely able to hold up his horn in that rancid little joint. When he put his mouth to his horn to play, it broke my heart. I felt like I was being strangled. His ability to play had vanished, and I saw my future.
It was terrible lesson for a young man fresh out of college and I did my best to forget it. But I understand it then and I understand it now: This is what happens when you walk through a supermarket and hear muzak playing ninth chords borrowed from your history; when you see instructions books made from the very harmonic innovations you created, and in my case, when you spend a lifetime watching films that spoof your community. Your entire culture is boiled down to greasy gut bucket jokester films, pornographic bling-rap, or poverty porn.
I used to think that if only there were a peaceful way, we could make Hollywood listen to the sound of America’s true drumbeat: the voices of working class poor, blacks, Asians, Latinos, Native Americans, and the so-called rednecks of this country; the people that walk the land, work in the K-Marts, run the fast food joints, drive the trucks, stand in line at 4 a.m. for the i-phones, go to church for redemption, and sell the knockoff s on ebay. But the new breed of Republicans have taken that high ground. They’ve gotten rich off it. That leaves me with nothing but the notion that Washington and Hollywood may be just alike. They’re engaged in a cultural war. They take your gun and use it on you, and it makes you sorry you drew your gun in the first place. It makes you wish you were a maid.


… his movies sort of suck. Boring, pretentious, ugly to look at, ponderous polemics that no one can relate to or enjoy. His biggest hit — INSIDE MAN — is the one that jettisons racially charged diatribes and focuses on entertaining the audience. Pity he didn’t learn from it. And to hear him bellyache about why there wasn’t a sequel or why he wasn’t asked back…
If you’re an asshole that makes the studios money, they let you work. If you’re just an asshole, well, that’s the end of it.
But every once in a while Hollywood learns there’s a special sort of asshole who makes the studio money and STILL isn’t asked back to the dance.
Spike Lee is just such a special kind of asshole.
“That was way harsh, Tai.”
I like his movies – 25th Hour, Do The Right Thing. Polemical? Hells yeah! And might I add, cathartic for the marginalized.
And yet Michael Mann and Doug Liman keep getting invited to make studio movies.
McBride misses the point. There are lots of African-American roles and stories on TV and a wide variety get recognized and ignored for various reasons.
He makes a SWEEPING assumption that since Hattie won an Oscar for playing a maid, and Viola is now nominated for playing a maid, nothing in Hollywood has changed since Gone With The Wind.
Bulls**t. He conveniently ignores Viola’s nomination for Doubt or Anthony Mackie’s turn in The Hurt Locker or Regina King in Southland or a number of great characters in True Blood or… And the list goes on and on.
A mother, a soldier, a cop; none of these characters are stereotypes.
Hollywood is famous for backstabbing, false promises, sudden cancellations and loving you one minute while preparing to hate you the next. By and large, they don’t discriminate.
Do we need more roles and stories rich with African-American contribution? You betcha. Do African-Americans have to work harder than us white folks to succeed? No doubt. But that’s across the board in ANY OCCUPATION.
You guys have been dealt a s****y hand and I for one don’t besmirch your right to be angry. In fact, I feel lucky you guys aren’t angrier. God knows this country has done enough to warrant it.
But you got to shake off the defeatism, McBride. Film is still a young art form. And if you want a greater contribution from the African-American community then you need to start in the classroom and put cameras in hands and teach them how to use Final Cut Pro and how to write screenplays and how to get internships at agencies and so on and so forth.
Things will get better. We just need a little less greed and a little more time, love and patience instead.
Oh, and one more thing. Next time you see Tyler Perry, tell him to hire a REAL HARDWORKING STRUGGLING ACTRESS and not Kim f**king Kardashian.
Beautifully put, Jack. I don’t agree with everything you say, and I think you’re missing McBride’s point a little, but it’s a great debate position. Thanks.
So… he’s right, but he’s not right? That type of feigned indignation of everyone to justify the discrimination that obviously exists is just more obfuscation because of fear of change that is really destroying this country & prohibiting the move forward by those too frightened to do so because of what they stand to lose, not the righteous indignation that identifies what’s really wrong.
Plainly put, McBride is absolutely right, Jack. & your pathetic, yes, RACIST assumptions that the African American community does NOT start in the classroom & does NOT put cameras in the hands of young people & does NOT teach them how to use Final Cut Pro are indicative of YOUR short sightedness. These programs already exist & produce scores of artists ready, willing and able to ply their craft in the industry. BTW, Final Cut Pro is a user friendly computer program that is very easy to use. Are you implying that African American youth/people aren’t intelligent enough to use it? Of course you aren’t. (sarcasm off)
Here’s what you refuse to admit and/or are unwilling to accept because it invalidates your specious claims & puts the onus on the status quo where it belongs: Until the Executives who green light projects believe in the marketability of stories of people of color that go beyond the depictions of maids, gangs, loyal subordinates & drug dealers & the people who tell them, nothing is going to change.
Just “believing” or “hoping” it’s going to change “someday” hasn’t done shit. Nor is it about to anytime soon.
Absolutely agree with you sameoldsame.
What’s hilarious about Jack’s comments is that it boils down to the notion that jackasses on the other side have always claimed which is “You people just need to work harder and shut up.”
Jack, here is is a lesson in simple truth. Unless you’ve experienced for yourself what it’s like to put in 110% into your work, received criticism and closed doors, still find a way to reach success, and then STILL be treated like a second class citizen, you have no idea what you are talking about.
wow, I can’t even begin to mention how short-sided, insensitive, and not so subtly racist this comment is.
“Do black people have to work harder…YEP!” Thank god you blacks aren’t angrier or I wouldn’t be able to come on here and give ya life lessons on how to succeed in this world.”
Last but not least… what other occupation do you need at least a $25 Million in investment just to get started. The expense of the film industry does a lot to stop the “pull yourself up by the bootstraps” mentality that white people think blacks lack.
Its hard to pull on your boot straps when you can’t afford boots. But a simple independent project isn’t far reaching enough to warrant funding.
Have you seen any of his films? Boring? Ugly? Do The Right Thing is one of the most inventive, provocative and moving films of the past 20 years. Malcolm X, Clockers, and 25th Hour are extremely well done. His Katrina doc on HBO was top notch. His Inside Man made the studio boatloads of money, so by your “asshole” theory he should have been allowed a shot at the sequel.
To say that “no one can relate to” his films is insulting. I’m a white Jewish man from the midwest and the humanity of the characters is universal and relatable no matter what your background. Do The Right Thing was made with such an exciting style and energy it was one of the first films that made me want to make movies myself. You may not be able to relate to them but many people do.
Your comments about “jettisoning racially charged diatribes” or what I would call “his voice” or “truth” sound like you want him to shut up and be a generic servant to the man. That’s plain insulting.
He’s had his share of poor films in the last decade, to be sure, but your categorization of him just shows your ignorance of his work and of the climate he has to produce work in.
Spike’s movies are hit or miss. Hits are Inside Man, Do the Right Thing (which I can still watch over and over today), She’s gotta have it….but I stopped watching his movies after a while. He doesn’t know how to make “entertaining” movies, and I don’t mean CGI blow things up movies. I so loved Inside Man, his most entertaining. I was hoping he would follow it up with another smart, entertaining movie but he didn’t. I’m not privvy to why Hollywood doesn’t fund Spike’s movies, but there’s nothing from stopping him from setting up a studio in Brooklyn or Atlanta and cranking out his own movies. I believe Bobby DeNiro has a studio in NYC. I think the problem is that Spike is a bad businessman and negotiator. He needs a “negotiator” to speak for him. But he’s not the only one. I’ve read that others, like Soderbergh, don’t like that part of making movies — negotiating and funding. They just want to make movies and be done. But life aint like that.
Mr. McBride, next time you see Ms. Viola Davis, bounce your patronizing theories about Aibileen Clark off her.
I suspect she will slap your half-white-half-black-all-foolish face.
Go look at Viola Davis’ imdb credits, appreciate the variety of characters she’s portrayed.
You obviously haven’t seen her speak about her performance, haven’t read any of her astonishingly in-depth interviews. You think she doesn’t realize how loaded and dangerous playing a Maid is? Do you know what kind of work and thought she put it on developing her character?
You “might be getting old,” McBride, but you haven’t learned a damn thing.
Even if all of his movies suck (and I disagree with you that they do), you missed the point. There are plenty of assholes in Hollywood. I moved from out of state to live and work in the Hollywood industry a little over ten years ago, and have been blessed with success in a relatively short period of time. But I can tell you from my personal experience that the number of Hollywood studio executives, producers, directors, agents and lawyers I’ve met who are ignorant, rude, immature, and entitled bratty assholes far outnumber the ones who are not. These people, I’m telling you now, are socially, mentally and psychologically about 15 years behind the rest of the country. I was shocked and amazed to discover this aspect of our country’s media capital.
For this reason, the notion that Hollywood execs won’t greenlight Spike’s movies because he’s an asshole is absolutely ridiculous. Most Hollywood level film directors are assholes; anyone who works in development knows that. Studio execs greenlight movies to make money or to get prestige; they take it for granted that they’ll have to deal with any number of serious assholes in the course of making a movie. It commonly takes hundreds of people to make a movie in Hollywood; you really think that some of the people involved in the process are not going to be assholes? If Hollywood execs only greenlit movies which are produced by people who are not assholes, P.T. Anderson and maybe a handful of other directors would be the only directors working at all.
On this ground McBride’s point, I’m sorry to say, is valid. I’ve seen the truth he speaks firsthand, and this truth about Hollywood is a shameful fact. Good thing that due to the evolution of technology it no longer takes millions to make a beautifully shot film; for this reason, Hollywood is now nice but not necessary. It may take some time, but we’re going to be seeing some major positive changes in American independent cinema over the next decade: hold onto your hats, folks : )
“for this reason, Hollywood is now nice but not necessary. It may take some time, but we’re going to be seeing some major positive changes in American independent cinema over the next decade: hold onto your hats, folks ”
I totally agree that technology and technology-based devices make it so easy to makes movies and you don’t need a lot of money. So maybe Spike should just stop bellyaching and do what he’s started doing — pickup a $500 digital camera and make movies. Notice that Woody Allen had to move to France/Europe to make movies and he’s churning them out 1-2-3. Earth to Spike: this is a big world, there are other places besides Hollywood.
Earth to Sally. Spike Lee HAS gone to foreign countries and raised money –did you not read the article? His justified complaint is that when the movie centers on black people it is damned near impossible to get the requisite funds, unless it’s some mammy crap, or poverty porn.
Rather than give the standard knee-jerk denials just accept that the industry is run-through with prejudice and people with racial biases. And these are the people who decide what gets greenlit and what doesn’t.
I also have to add that telling someone they can make a sequel to Inside Man with a “500 digital camera” is about the most stupid thing I’ve read in a while. Again, read the post, then watch Lee’s passionate reply during the RHS Q&A. The studios absolute refusal to fund an Inside Man sequel (guess they were disappointed there wasn’t a white-savior or a comforting mammy figure, or extremely obese ghetto slut in the script) was the whole reason why he went off on Hollywood during that Q&A.
Read, then reply.
Spike Lee is a great American filmmaker. Not perfect, but great. A singular voice. He should be lauded and applauded. Malcolm X is a brilliant film. Others are also first rate: 25th Hour, She’s Gotta Have it, Summer of Sam, Four Little Girls, Do The Right Thing…how many original films does he have to do to get some respect? Lee’s films are personal, involving and most importantly, they have something to say. Think about that next time you are in a Green Lantern screening, or other such nonsense.
Hilarious and so true.
@Maybe This is the Reason:
You missed the point entirely. And you saying Lee’s films are ugly is so disingenuous it’s comical and you must be blind. The technical proficiency in most of the films is top notch.
Nothing wrong with dealing in issues of race either cinematically or in the media. What Lee said wasn’t wrong. The proof is in the release schedule. The bigger issue is people not wanting to recognize the facts of Hollywood’s treatment of filmmakers of color. It’s not just African-American’s, but Latin, Asian, Native American filmmakers as well.
Lee might be an ass hole. But that doesn’t negate his observations. It also should have no involvement in his work prospects. Hollywood is full of assholes at every level of the industry and they work constantly.
“ponderous polemics that no one can relate to or enjoy…” There is no way you have seen the films you are disparaging.
One of the great things about Lee’s work is that he conveys the spectrum of real, human emotions in his films. Even the ones that don’t totally work still manage to re-frame an argument, touch a chord, or come to a situation with fresh eyes. A few examples:
-”Crooklyn” captures the brother-sister sibling under-15 relationship better than any film I have seen. The way those kids relate to each other is universal.
-”25th hour” continues to be the best emotional portrayal of New Yorkers relating to 9/11, in a way the maudlin and manipulative “Extremely Loud…” can’t come close to.
-”Summer of Sam” and “Do the Right Thing” both portray insular & tribal urban communities as well as any Scorcese film.
There are plenty of filmmakers who haven’t had half the career Lee does and have received dozens more accolades and studio opportunities.
he made one great movie, do the right thing. nothing else has been memorable.
you haven’t watched any of his other movies, have you?
i feel bad for the people who don’t like spike lee’s films. to me, he’s one of the living greats. she’s gotta have it, do the right thing, jungle fever and malcolm x were groundbreaking films and terrific films and there are many other terrific films littered across a great career. he got game. huey p. newton. his katrina doc. the list goes on. i’d never miss a film he directed. his work is always entertaining, challenging, defies convention, provokes thought and always looks gorgeous, too. if you want to know who is going to be the sought after DP of tomorrow, see a spike lee film today — he’s helped get so many careers going, in front of and behind the camera. his use of music is up there at the highest level. i’d place him along my five most gifted and influential and simply great living directors in american cinema. go back and watch those films. to me, if you don’t see merit, i’m just at a loss. i don’t understand. i agree with some of the pros and cons on this essay, there does seems a rather easy parallel in saying maid=maid, yet the frustration underneath what he’s saying seems totally understandable, too. it’s a thought-provoking, challenging essay which divides people. like spike’s movies do. but thank goodness for him. seriously, people, go back and watch these films. he’s one of the all-time greats and it’d be nice to celebrate him as he deserves while we’ve got him.
You know I agree wit this post. If you continue to make BAD movies it does not matter who you are. James if you continue to write bad screenplays you will continue to not to have a Hollywood career. Its up to you. If Spike ever makes a great movie, he will be fine.
Redhook Summer IS NOT a great, good, watchable, movie and Spike knows it.
How poignant and well written. I have a feeling most readers won’t get through it because it won’t apply to them. A majority of commenters will discuss Spike Lee and his persona, but James McBride is correct and will probably continue to be correct well after I’m buried in the ground from old age. And as of now, I’m 21.
People need to stop blaming the victim (in this case the audience). The fact is these executives in both television and film are pretty much all the same and only allow one point of view to be told or they help kill it. I am not sure why people keep focusing on Republicans, these dudes do not run Hollywood at all. It’s your white liberal brethren that are fucking you over and yet you still ride with these guys.
Minorities in this country are lost.
I think you’re forgetting how fickle Hollywood can be. I seem to recall Soderbergh having to screen at slamdance at the nadir of his comercial success because Sundance wouldn’t have him.
Spike’s made only truly, phenomenally great picture, a handful of good ones and the rest are wildly uneven.
In a town with a short memory, you’re treated as well as your last picture’s perceived.
Like all but a toddler’s handful of directors, his reputation will rise and fall more than is rational for so long as he continues working and he’ll be revered as a filmmaker who pushed the entertainment industry in a positive direction and birthed a few gems admidst a prolific career when he retires.
Mr. Lee has made some teriffic movies. He is a gifted filmmaker with a unique voice. Having a political POV means he gets some enemies. But you simply can’t tell me that he is one of the top filmmakers over the past 20 years. The attitude of poster number 1, above, is a good example of the type of BS that is passed around the back of those not in the ‘in crowd’. Yeah, it’s like high school. A very wealthy, very white, very privileged high school. And when you aren’t one of them or lusting to be one of them – that’s what you get. They ignore the talent and abilities because he’s different. He doesn’t say the things you want him to say. He doesn’t go out of his way to let the establishment hear how wonderful they are.
If you think Inside Man doesn’t have a racially charged district in it, then you haven’t seen it. Lee is s great filmmaker. That is undeniable. Doesn’t matter his ideology or political beliefs.
Great piece. Spike Lee’s a wildly erratic filmmaker, but at his best–25th Hour, most recently, and Bamboozled before that–he’s among the best alive. I’ll always be interested in whatever he’s working on.
meant “diatribe”. darn spell-checker.
He sure made the black man look great in his Nike commercials years ago. Not and I agree his movies do suck.
The More Things Change………. Smh. Truth Hurts. That’s why he got this reaction
Thank you, Mike. Spike is one of our most amazing, prolific and influential filmmakers. He should be afforded the same level of esteem as Woody Allen, Martin Scorsese and Steven Soderbergh. That he is not, given the sheer size of his body of work and the critical acclaim that much of it has received, is just one indicator that there is validity to some of the charges he makes about how the climate of race in America continues to negatively impact our industry.
Speaking of Woody Allen. It is kind of amazing that he gets chance after chance to make films considering that post-1993 (the time he started sleeping with his girlfriend’s daughter) he’s only made two actually good films: “Match Point” and “Midnight in Paris” (maybe “Vicky Christina” if you are feeling generous). Everything else has been varying degrees of unwatchable – yet Hollywood waits with bated breath for his next opus.
Polanski drugs and sodomizes a minor and flees the country to live in exile and the Hollywood elites knock each other over trying to get in his next film.
Meanwhile Spike is a law abiding American citizen with no personal scandals. His biggest crime is apparently using his freedom of speech to shine a light on what he feels are injustices and inequality and the man is treated like a leper by the studios. That is pretty messed up.
Awesome observation. 100% true.
My feeling is that Lee, and now his co-writer McBride, is reacting largely to the fact that Red Hook Summer didn’t get the enthusiastic applause he was hoping it would get — by some accounts, it bombed narratively.
Sure, there are many points they both make that are valid, but they almost feel like a defense mechanism to mask an ego and self image fraught with insecurity and personal glory.
Does he have a right to demand that after, by all accounts, a prolific career? Absolutely. But call it what it is, then. This isn’t about the creative rights, for e.g., of the Asian American filmmaker in this country. This was about his wanting to get his just rewards, respect, applause, glory. And he clearly didn’t — at least not at Sundance.
What’s wrong with taking the movie to VOD? From what I’m reading Red Hook didn’t get a distribution deal; right….well earth to Spike, there’s always the internet and VOD.
You clearly didn’t read the letter or the header piece introducing it. Lee’s diatribe was largely about the fact that he couldn’t get a studio to greenlight Inside Man 2.
Now many white people will say Lee needs to make more “commercial” stuff. He did. It made money. And Hollywood didn’t like it.
You can tell yourself any deflection you want, it doesn’t change the facts. Spike Lee was right at Sundance. And right from day one.
The great thing about art is it’s totally subjective. With that said: in my opinion (obviously) Spike is one of our greatest living directors… but he’s not a strong writer. Of his top 5 greatest hits: Malcolm X, Do the Right Thing, Get On the Bus, 25th Hour and Inside Man – he only wrote 2 of them. No they’re not doing Inside Man 2 but he is attached to direct Old Boy. He continues to work. He just needs to stop writing.
Also – McBride makes a lot of interesting points but big guns are what allow you to push your culture around the world in the first place.
Well put, Edward. Bravo…
Well stated,thank you.
Hey I hope Octavia or Viola Davis wins an Oscar but next time can the play something other than maids. It’s sad. Hollywood sucks.
Spike Lee is terrible and his films are mediocre at best. He is an angry racist. His films might not seem nearly as mediocre if he shut his mouth and let his work do the talking. Instead he calls out Tarantino for using the N word too much or Samuel L. Jackson for working with him. Seems jealous of a more talented writer/director.
I have enjoyed some of spikes movies… But as to this essay, it comes off as whiney and pretentious. I’m sorry if this man goes thru his life seeing racists around every corner, but i have many friends who are minorities and I can assure you none of them think this way. I think most Americans black or white are just concerned with living their lives, raising families, making a living. I think this mentality of victimhood is just sad.
You obviously are not a minority and do not have any minority friends who tell you the truth to your face.
I was going to say something critical about Spike Lee until I read that comment about the torture that was Green Lantern. I sat there wondering at the roomful of well paid people who had to have thought that was a good way to spend money and talent. Spike Lee is a genius.
simple same-ism is a big factor. Nothing personal, people just want to see flicks, and people in them, they relate to. No matter how much spike wants it otherwise, mass audiences just aren’t much interested in the films he so wants them to be interested in, even 73 years later. He should stop beating his head against a wall and quit trying to force things. That clearly doesn’t work.
You are completely missing the point. INSIDE MAN made money for a studio. It was an American hit. Usually hits = sequels. Spike wants to make a sequel and the studio will not produce the cash to make it happen. That was the entire point of his “rant” at Sundance. I’d be pretty frustrated too, if I were him waiting for a studio greenlight that is not going to come while lesser hacks get sequel cash all the time.
Malcolm X is a masterpiece, so are many of Spike’s movies. He’s not wrong about his observations.
These comments seem to ignore a pretty important point James is making in his article – namely the issue of color. The response is focused on Mr. Lee’s success and/or failures as a filmmaker. People seem quite focused on the limitations of the films by virtue of the skill of the director rather than his color – which was kinda the point of the editorial in the first place.
Nobody seems to want to admit that the reality is that it ain’t easy being an artist, ESPECIALLY a black, Indian, Latino, Woman (but not mentioned) or Redneck (ah, any names come to mind, Earl?) than a white artist. Being black maybe ain’t all that beautiful after all — at least in our current overwhelmingly white system.
Everybody seems to want to focus on anything EXCEPT race. Which was kinda the point.
Okay — let’s say I’m mistaken. Spike’s films suck – except for one or two. So anybody wanna trade places with him? Trade places – not paychecks. (No shortage of readers willing to do that, I’d imagine). He makes a point I agree with: It’s just better to be white, eh? Even for the token Rednecks.
Spikey got lucky once. Then began believing his own self generated hype. From some of the comments posted here I would say that most of the pro people are too afraid of being labelled a “racist” by him not to say anything but how great he is. When Spike walks on water, changes that water into wine and resurrects the dead, then maybe, just maybe I’ll believe he is the second coming. Until that time I will hold my original opinion. Not worth the time, money or effort to waste on his ego trips.
As a white director, I will say that the “Driving Miss Daisy” metaphor applies not only to black directors, but to any director working within the studio system. Or does he think that white directors get free reign from the executives? We are all their employees, with the exception of people like Nolan or Cameron who’ve reached such levels of success that they’ve earned the level of control they have.
Also, I find hard to believe that Universal refused to make an Inside Man sequel just to spite Lee. If they thought it was going to be a moneymaker, they would have done it. Green is the color that trumps all others.
I agree I don’t get why there hasn’t been an Inside Man 2 but as for Spike having trouble with funding in general is simple, he hasn’t made a money maker since Malcom X, only Inside Man but let’s face it that made money because it was a Denziel Washington thriller rather than a Spike Lee joint.
Besides like someone else said he’s attached to the Oldboy remake so he’s not doing as bad as some other New York independants like say Abel Ferrara.
If he’s really doing that bad just get a name star and talk to Nu Image, I’m sure they’ll greenlight whatever it is (as long as they can make it for peanuts)
and no I don’t think of him as an “angry African American” I think of him as an angry man with an ego, the whole suing Spike TV made me think this.
But yeah why isn’t there Inside Man 2?
Maybe “Inside Man 2″ hasn’t been made because Denzel and/or Jodie Foster are not on board.
Just something to consider.
Andy, you need to learn to read. Lee himself said the STUDIO wouldn’t pony up the cash. Your imaginary “scheduling conflict” only exists inside your head. It’s one thing to argue with what Lee actually said, but when you start making up things you destroy your own credibility.
Facts …something for you “to consider.”
Problem is, substancial majority of Lee’s work as a narrative filmmaker does suck (as opposed to his documentaries). Heavy ego, no story skills. Check his last few movies: “Miracle at St. Anna”? “She Hate Me”? Both unwatchable. We can talk about skin color all we want but the product Is. Not. There.
You conveniently left out Inside Man and 25th Hour which were made within that same period. I know of no longtime filmmaker that is batting .1000. Even Martin Scorsese has some films I never wanna see again. Every movie that Soderbergh has made after Ocean’s 13 has flopped – including the 4 1/2 hour Che – yet he is still hailed as a visionary. Why he praised for sticking to his vision but Lee isn’t?