Spike Lee In 1995, I thought that the tough time of Spike Lee was one of the best films of the year; I recently found a video of that gap and picked it up. After reconsideration, my complexity made me feel shocked again. This is the first city drama depicting ethnic relations within the city with the complexity required for this ubiquitous culture problem. On the surface, this is similar to amnesty, but its biggest concern is that drugs and violence pollute the entire community and dramatically exacerbate the collapse of African American youth.
Every semester, my film students will see Spikree 's "right thing" (1989). In each semester, their reactions resemble those of Mookie (Spike Lee) who ignites the neighbor's riot by breaking the window of his pizzeria and throwing the trash can. People of most colors think that the personality of Li is "doing the right thing", and most white students do not understand why Mookie "does this for the boss" Hmm. After the semester? Like most movies by Speeke's Lee, Do Do Thing challenges the audience. For beginners, Lee has combined Malcolm X's confrontation ideology (self-defense violence) and Martin Luther King (always non-violence) without clearly saying that it is always a better choice. More importantly, Hollywood usually only provides two or three clues for us to follow.
The movie title, Do The Right Thing, is a powerful rhetorical design used by Spike Lee. Da Mayor, played by a recent great actor, Ossie Davis, told Spike Lee to play Mookie to do the right thing. Nobody has said correct content in the movie. Lee told the audience to do the right thing, but he never told them what it is. Instead he created a context in the film and forced the audience to draw their own conclusions about what is right. Some people think Li's words are obvious and easy to identify, but it is obvious that you can react without knowing what Li is trying to react to you. Spike concluded that this response reflects the personal belief of the race. He wants the understanding of what is right for the audience. Spike advocates three arguments about what is right, but never told us what in the movie he thought it should be. The first parameter is the movie itself.
Analyzing Spike Lee's movies to do the right thing For my lens analysis, I chose a shot from the Spike Lee movie "Do the right thing." This is the second shot after the climax riot. It is characterized by the mayor of Da's and the sister of the mother corresponding to the noisy incident of the previous night. After the police killed Rahhim Radio, the block was destroyed because he and Thrall were destroyed due to a fight due to Radio Rahim's radio box capacity. The struggle at a very superficial level is related to loud stereo, but the real meaning of struggle is related by the climax of anger and tension among the characters of previously caused movies.