The Borneo Post

Spike Lee’s signature: Mix of entertainm­ent, activism, rage

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NEW YORK: Spike Lee, whose new film ‘BlacKkKlan­sman' premieres in Cannes on Monday, has captivated audiences for more than 30 years with his depictions of life in black America, infused with his signature mix of entertainm­ent, activism and rage. Lee first grabbed attention at the festival with his breakout feature, ‘She's Gotta Have It' -- shot in two weeks in black and white during the hot summer of 1985, in part thanks to his grandmothe­r's savings. With that film, which won a youth prize at Cannes, Lee “broke the glass ceiling” for black filmmakers and “opened the doors for everybody who's come a fter him,” says Michael Genet, an actor and screenwrit­er who penned the script for ‘She Hate Me'.

African-American director Ryan Coogler “couldn't be who he is today with ‘ Black Panther' without Spike Lee doing what he did,” he adds. “It's impossible.”

Lee -- born Shelton Jackson Lee in Georgia on March 20, 1957 -- was raised in Brooklyn's Fort Greene neighborho­od, where he filmed ‘She's Gotta Have It' and which is still home to his production company 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks.

A small man with a piercing gaze from behind his round glasses, Lee acted in that first film, taking the supporting role of motor-mouthed Mars Blackmon, one of the main character's three suitors.

John Canada Terrell, one of his co- stars in the movie, described Lee as a “very strange, cerebral kind of cat.”

“Spike was always quiet. He kept to himself but I called him the idea man,” recalls Herbert Eichelberg­er, an associate professor of film at Clark Atlanta University whom Lee calls his mentor.

“He would come with all kinds of ideas about doing films and making certain kinds of approaches to a situation.”

Storytelle­r

“From the start, he was a good storytelle­r,” says Eichelberg­er, who thought Lee's career would be focused on documentar­ies, given his keen powers of observatio­n of society around him.

But Lee would embrace that format only once, in 1997 with ‘4 Little Girls' -- the Oscarnomin­ated story of the racially motivated bombing of an AfricanAme­rican church during the US civil rights movement.

In the decade in between, Lee establishe­d himself as a force to be reckoned with, producing films with an often political bent like ‘ Do the Right Thing', ‘Malcolm X' and ‘Jungle Fever'.

Lee remained outside the usual Hollywood glare, mindful of keeping a hold on his own marketing, distributi­on and editing. His features starred mainly black casts.

“He wants to decide what he puts forth as his film,” said Eichelberg­er, adding that Lee usually only makes movies that he has written as well.

That allows him to tell the stories as he sees them, blending human relationsh­ips with social themes and dark humor.

“I said to him, ‘Why do you even worry about the writing?' And he said, ‘No, Michael, I am a writer first. Always a writer first',” Genet recalls.

‘We can’t be satisfied’

Today, Lee -- a huge fan of the New York Knicks -- is respected as a director of films with wide appeal that depict American society and culture with razorsharp clarity.

“When we came back (from Cannes), the production had opened in New York City and I couldn't walk on the street. It was a hit,” said Terrell, Lee's costar in ‘She's Gotta Have It'.

That success catapulted Lee to unexpected stardom -- he made a series of black and white Air Jordan ads for Nike, in character as Mars Blackmon and costarring NBA legend Michael Jordan, that changed sports marketing forever. — AFP

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