Los Angeles Times

Spike Lee is in drama’s corner

- By Gary Goldstein

“Waiting for Godot” meets “Do the Right Thing” in “Pass Over,” director Spike Lee’s filmed version of Antoinette Nwandu’s electrifyi­ng play, which debuted in June 2017 at Chicago’s Steppenwol­f Theatre under the direction of Danya Taymor.

The movie, shot on the Steppenwol­f stage in September in front of an invited audience that included community groups (whose arrival and departure buoyantly bookend the film), proves a brief yet rousing experience, one that retains its theatrical power via Lee’s deftly constructe­d transfer.

Original cast members Jon Michael Hill and Julian Parker vibrantly star as, respective­ly, the guarded Moses and jauntier Kitch, two homeless African American men encamped on a volatile urban street corner, which is re-created on an effectivel­y spare set.

The duo spend their time trading boisterous, N-wordfilled, often absurdist banter (Nwandu has cited “Godot’s” Samuel Beckett as one of several influences); dodging gunfire and dreaming of the day they will “pass over” to a better existence.

Moses and Kitch’s reveries are vividly interrupte­d by Mister (Ryan Hallahan, another original cast player), a clueless, upper-crust white man who wanders into the ’hood with a brimming picnic basket, and later by a racist cop (Blake DeLong) who will factor in with more dire consequenc­es.

Hopefully, Nwandu’s compact tale, so rich with jarring authentici­ty and boldly configured social commentary, can now reach a wide and appreciati­ve audience via Lee’s provocativ­e, propulsive film.

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 ?? Chayse Irvin Amazon Studios ?? JULIAN PARKER, left, and Jon Michael Hill are homeless men camped on an urban street corner in film.
Chayse Irvin Amazon Studios JULIAN PARKER, left, and Jon Michael Hill are homeless men camped on an urban street corner in film.

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