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Spiking the Joint
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16509 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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11 / 1989 |
1,418 Words |
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Paul Coates Paul Coates is professor of literature at McGill University,
Montreal, Canada. |
Emerging from Do the Right Thing, dazed by the Dolby stereo sensation of having been bounced around inside a ghetto blaster for two hours, the audience may be forgiven for wondering just what the right thing is. Spike Lee's new film is clearly of two minds on the subject. For much of its duration two opinions jostle one another, with neither achieving dominance; in the end they deadlock, as a quotation from Martin Luther King unconditionally condemning violent protest is followed by one from Malcolm X justifying it, and the two men are shown in a beaming handshake whose utopian promise mocks all that has preceded it. The quotations and the photograph are a despairing cop-out; unable to sort out the relative value of opposed strands in the black heritage, Lee concludes (mocked by his own title) by refusing to choose.
Acridly gifted
Spike Lee, acridly gifted writer, producer, and director, is also the central actor: Mookie, Dodgers fan and delivery boy for Italian-run Sal's Famous Pizzeria, is a slouching, diminutive stoneface whose tormented eyes belie his stoical set expression. His seeming impassivity is a holding action against the immense tension of furiously opposed forces. These are teased out in the film's kaleidoscopic aesthetic, which alternates a quasi-pastoral image of summer life on a Brooklyn block, where old-timers exchange cracks and gently wafting soundtrack music diffuses a Porgy and Bess atmosphere, with--on the other hand--the jagged passion implicit in expressionistic canted angles, red-painted walls, and threatening wide-angle low shots of Radio Raheem's face as his overpowering ghetto blaster pours out Public Enemy's vitriolic gospel ("Fight the Power"). The ghetto blaster pumps out the sound of the
... (1994 of 8242 Characters)
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