DO THE RIGHT THING ! :
Twenty - Five Year Anniversary
by Joshua Triliegi
Motion pictures that are created at the end of a decade
tend to encapsulate, envelope and regurgitate that time
and place. Sometimes, they throw the entire experience
back at us, either in celebration of it, or, as is often the
case, rebelling entirely against the values of that time
and of that place. These films, for some reason or another
are important, they are the ' punctuation mark ' at the
end of a stylistic sentence. Sometimes a simple period,
other times a question mark and, rather effectively, every
now & then, the ever defiant: exclamation point ! Looking
at the decades in a linear fashion allows the viewer to put
in perspective the decisions being made by the film maker.
In 1939, films like Gone with The Wind, The Wizard of OZ and
The Hunchback of Notre Dame expressed a certain something
of the decade that was. In 1949, it was, All The Kings Men,
The Third Man & Twelve O'Clock High. 1959: North by Northwest,
Imitation of Life & Some Like It Hot. In 1969, Midnight Cowboy,
Easy Rider, Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid. 1979 gave us:
Apocalypse Now, Being There and Norma Rae. In 1989, we were
given films such as Sex, Lies and Videotape, Batman & My Left Foot.
Though, the film we are discussing is Spike Lee's, opus feature,
Do The Right Thing. An exclamation point film that entirely coughs
up the indulgent artifice that we now know as the Nineteen Eighties.
A completely retro progressive time and place, a decade for the so-
called white man. Conservative values, commercial qualities and
a return to the 1950' s America, which, deep down inside, was a big
step backwards from the cultural and ethnic advances made in the
1960' s and 1970' s, especially for a young African American such
as Mr. Spike Lee. An outspoken Brooklynite through and through.
The son of a Jazz purist, raised in the 1960' s & '70' s in New York
City. The center of defiant cultural celebration and often upheaval.
" I was raised in a household where we were all encouraged by my
parents to speak your mind. ", the film maker admits and indeed in
Do The Right Thing, that is exactly what most, if not every character
does. A speaking of the minds often leads to some form of friction,
and with the melting pot experience, the mix of origins, ethnicities,
values and the long hot summer in the city, friction leads to fire and
fire leads to ashes, with ashes, there is closure and then a rebirth.
Spike Lee's Do The Right Thing is indeed an American landmark film.
I recall viewing the film on opening weekend with a rather light skinned
audience on Wilshire boulevard in West Los Angeles, by the end, there
was indeed confusion. By the time the ever famous trashcan scene
ensued, even I was a bit embroiled in a recognization [ new word ] of
values. Did Mookie, the pizza delivering protagonist, quote-unquote :
Do The Right Thing ? We had to ask ourselves, what happened here ?
A man was killed, there was an injustice, no one in authority seemed
to care, there was a 'cover up' of the facts. There was a history of this
type of act and someone, somewhere, somehow needed to make a
statement, Mookie, [ played here by Spike Lee] made the statement.
Even to this day, it can be debated, wether Sal' s Pizzeria should have
bit the dust. Which is exactly what makes this film important. All too
often, films answer the questions that we as humans need to ponder.
Original, author style films don't answer questions, they ask questions,
leaving the viewer to delve, wonder and eventually ask and maybe,
even answer, for themselves, what the right thing to do actually is.
For a film to stand the test of time, there are several criterion. Does the
film hold up to audiences today? Does the film still speak to any social
truth or endearing value ? Does the film encapsulate a time and a place
as a historical document which is worth preserving ? Yes. Yes. Yes.
Do The Right Thing is not a 'perfect ' film, in terms of balance or so -
called structure, or narration, but it is a very original, truthful and
heartfelt film with a certain ' energy ' that is difficult to describe here.
The film has a visual style not unlike, West Side Story, with rich colors,
costumes, ensemble cast choruses & of course the clashing of cultures
on the streets of New York City. African, Italian, Puerto Rican, Asian
and indeed White or Anglo Americans vying for their own space to live,
to walk, to inhabit in equal parts. Add to that rules, mob mindset and
one long hot summer and you have a great drama with many touches
of humor, slice of life moments and heroic situations: Such as Da Mayor
saving the life of a young boy recklessly crossing the street.
Spike Lee has Woody Allen on his left: humor, love of women,
family story telling & a 'do it your own way' style. On his right, he
has Martin Scorsese : bold visual style, muscular camera movements,
music appreciation & a 'this is the way it really is' style. But no one
can say he is overly influenced by any director, writer or film maker.
Nor is he the 'first African American director' to have success. Spike
often sites Charles Burnett and Gordon Parks, but like any great
director or artist, Spike Lee has an appreciation for film history .
In that way, he is like Mr. Scorsese, a sort of encylpedic like mind
for his craft, it's rich history and why we love, make and celebrate
the art of film making.
The question rises here as to wether Spike Lee would have received
the kind of accolades that he did not receive [ Canne Fim Festival ]
for instance, had he not played the character of Mookie, the person
who is ultimately responsible for the demise of Sal' s Pizzeria ? The
connection audience members make on a visceral level can often effect
the judgement on a larger level. Spike Lee is a writer, director playing
a character in a movie that he has written and directed. Something
that he has in common with Woody Allen, another influence on Lee,
specifically his first film, She's Gotta Have It. Film makers take what
they know, film history, life experience, social concerns, story telling
and when they step up to the hoop, walk into the ring, take the bat,
the utilize the skills from previous players / directors and give it their
all.
So what if Spike Lee is outspoken ? Since when has that become
such a big deal, to speak your mind ? Is that not what we are all
about here in America ? Did we not, originally enter onto this
beautiful continent, to have a few more freedoms? And did we
recently forget that, also brought on ships involuntarily, were a
group of people who had no say in many of the goings on here ?
That after a few hundred years we finally have an African American
President ? And at this years Oscar ceremony Best Picture went to
Twelve years a Slave directed by Steve McQueen, an African-English
director. Sometimes it takes an outsider to tell the inside truth.
So Spike Lee is outspoken, good for him, what's your problem ?
Cat got your tongue ? People often tell me that I am too outspoken.
Well, I guess I am in good company then. My people went through
a form of slavery, years of oppression, even an attempt at extinction.
Spike Lee's films are inspiring, energetic, funny, outrageous, risky,
engaging, sexy, socially relevant, even dangerous: that's the stuff
of good story telling. If Spike Lee had been Latin, Asian, or Swedish
& still made the films he had made, this appreciation of Do The Right
Thing would still remain the same, with the exception of the previous
paragraph. I did not graduate from film school, though I am a film
maker, screenplay writer and film critic or historian, if you will. One
of my teachers, informally speaking, is Spike Lee. His books & diaries
published after making, She's Gotta Have It, his first feature, were
instrumental in helping me to overcome any obstacles that ever stood
in my way. For many of us, his career is our career, someone from the
so-called neighborhood made it happen, one of us got to tell our stories.
Do The Right Thing is turning twenty - Five this year and it is time
for a new generation to discover this film and ask themselves those
important questions.
The film also has a cast of actors that will go on to have careers that
include: Samuel L. Jackson, Rosie Perez, John Turturro, Martin Lawrence,
Roger Guenveur Smith & Giancarlo Esposito. Many already had stalwart
creds such as Ruby Dee, Ossie Davis, John Savage and Danny Aiello .
Another way to test a film for longevity factor is: Do the characters
still exist in your minds eye ? Where are they today, when you think
of them ? Mookie, Da Mayor, Senior Love Daddy, Buggin-Out, Smiley,
Tina, Sal, Vito, Mother Sister, Jade, Ahmad, Ella, Sonny and much more
importantly, Radio Raheem, where would Radio Raheem be today ?
That is the real question. Do The Right Thing doesn't claim to answer
that question. You have to answer it. Like Da Mayor tells Mookie
early on in the film, " … Always Do The Right Thing. " , and Mookies
answer back ?, " Thats It ?, I got it, I'm Gone. "
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BUREAU: FILM
BIG WEDNESDAY
" Nobody Surfs Forever "
A Thirty Five Year Anniversary Appreciation
By Joshua A. TRILIEGI
It's hard to believe that thirty five years have passed since this classic surf film about
California and specifically Malibu beach surfing culture, characters and history had its
debut. Upon re watching this classic film recently, I was drawn into a kind of nostalgia
that reminded me of other classic films from the seventies that seem to define the
formative years here in California. American Graffiti being the other fine example of a
piece of cinema that celebrates, defines & indeed explains to outsiders what it was like
to be a part of a California subculture that has since gone mainstream: Classic Cars.
Big Wednesday does the same thing for Surfing. These days surfing and its nearest
offspring, skateboarding, are world renown industries owned by a hand full of companies,
corporations, associations and ecologically informed non-profit organizations.
But back in the day, guys like Leroy, Jack and Matt made California surfing. The lifestyle
and its loyalty to expressing ones self with nature was a coveted and special relationship
that each surfer had on his or her own. It was a private experience one had with the
waves, the coast, the ocean, the earth itself. It is a sacred thing to drop in on a wave
and ride it as long as one is able. Honing a craft, one-second at a time, in unison with
mother nature. Simply, a person, their craft and the ocean itself relating to one another.
I recently took a bike ride along all the coast passing all best surf spots where much of
the film was photographed. Pacific Coast Highway starting at the County Line, Topanga
Canyon & on into Malibu Beach. Re visiting these historic beaches and film locations is a
beautiful way to understand the art of surfing. Reviewing the motion picture Big Wednesday
directed by John Milius and starring Gary Busey, Jan Michael Vincent and William Katt and
thinking about their careers & some of the damage done personally was a bit heartbreaking.
I guess that's the power of film to preserve a time and a place. To express a moment in time,
be it, documentary, fiction or otherwise. As far as surf films go, when it comes to fictional
versions of what surfing is about, Big Wednesday, in my book, is simply the best at capturing the philosophy, the lifestyle & the character of what it is to be a surfer at that particular time and place: the 1960's and its transition into the early seventies. With a cameo by Legendary Lightening Bolt founder and classic surfer, Jerry Lopez. An important casting choice that gives the film a groundedness in reality & boosted its credibility with real surf fans during its heyday & initial release. The red surfboard with a yellow lightening bolt placed directly in a vertical fashion down the center of the board was & will always be as iconic as a Mercedes Benz logo.
There are the documentaries by Bruce Brown: Endless Summer and the like. As well as
a catalogue of other classics such as Five Summer Stories & the others within the genre.
More recently Stacy Peralta' s Dogtown Documentary & subsequent Lords of Dogtown as
well as his Big Wave Surf documentaries have added more information to surfing dialogue.
But still and all, Big Wednesday is king. I know because I grew up and witnessed the tail
end of this particular period and hung out with and admired the older guys who were a
part of this important period in West Coast & specifically Southern California surf culture.
[ Read the short story SURFERS AND LOWRIDERS on our Website for more on this period]
Big Wednesday captures the music, the friendship, the heroic stature, the generation to
generation torch passing, the gaining your friends/losing your friends aspect of growing up.
The original musical compositions by Basil Poledouris and theme songs hold up just fine.
Nothing is too trendy or dated, The costumes, sets, locations and acting are what we call
pitch perfect. The props and logos have become legendary. The BEAR logo to this day is
being reprinted and celebrated on sweatshirts, classic cars and stickers. Big Wednesday
is a classic film in the Warner Brothers catalogue that helped to redefine a generation
of West Coast culture: surfing, skateboarding and the California cool that people from all
over the world appreciate, envy and honor, sometimes more than the locals themselves.
The actors actually did most of their own surfing in this film, which is rare. There are
surfing doubles, but the editing and cinematography is extremely well done for its
time. Shot on real film, on location, with a group of actors and actresses, including Lee
Purcell and Patti D'Arbanville at the very end of a time & place when Hollywood was able
to create stories that were highly dependent on character, story and emotional content.
This film which was released in 1978, thirty five years ago, stands up against any film
of its genre. It's as entertaining as American Graffiti, as honest as Dogtown , as funny
as Animal House and ultimately a heartfelt and heartbreaking story about the fleeting
moments in life. Like a wave: life, friends, careers, loves, memories pass rather quickly.
Movies such as Big Wednesday preserve these moments, capture those times, creating
a painting of sorts, a photograph, a time, a place that will never be the same again.
Cinema has a way of allowing us to re-enter history, experiencing life itself to enjoy
over and over. This has been an appreciation of BIG WEDNESDAY on the 35 year
Anniversary. An ongoing Series of articles marking the Films, Books & Artworks that
are worth remembering, re-watching, re-reading and re-celebrating time & time again.
by Joshua A. TRILIEGI Exclusively for http://www.BUREAUofARTSandCULTURE.com
BUREAU: FILM
THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING
" In The Kingdom of Kitsch "
A Twenty Five Year Anniversary Appreciation
By Joshua A. TRILIEGI
In 1988 director Phillip Kaufman brought to the screen a novel by Milan Kundera.
Mr Kaufman has always been at least, a decade ahead of the times. His films have
constantly created genres, influenced directors and bravely translated literature &
historical events to the screen. His adherence and loyalty to source material is
unmatched. The Wanderers, The Right Stuff, Henry and June, to name a few, have
inspired and set the stage for other films within the genre, consistently raising the
bar on truth, quality, reverence to the originator and entertainment well beyond the
current trends. Mr. Kaufman brings to life words with a keen sense of detail and a
wide world view which brings the viewer into a realm of reality or fantasy that seems
to punctuate humanity and specifically the boundaries with which life presents.
The Unbearable Lightness of Being might be considered his masterpiece, although,
due to his prolific and influential output in other genres, it is safe to say that Kaufman
will not be remembered for any one film. He is under rated, in terms of being what
they call a house hold name. But to directors in the industry, film students and
international film festivals, associations and aficionados, Mr. Kaufman is heroic.
The Right Stuff opened the door for a slew of astronaut films including Apollo 13.
Kaufman practically created the genre. By setting an absolute tone, fabulous casting,
flawless research and collaboration with top costumers, photographers and producers
his influence is felt far beyond the time and the place with which his films are released.
In The Unbearable Lightness of Being a stellar cast of actors bring to life historical
events. Politics, passion, literature and history meld into a contemporary take on a
situation which relates to and possibly rivals director David Lean's, Doctor Zhivago.
Film history relies on itself to continue certain traditions. Film makers grow up watching
films which inspire works of art that later influence the next generation and so on.
As Zhivago was based on a great novel about love that just so happens to be placed
in a time of political upheaval, so to does the source material for Milan Kundera's novel.
Daniel Day - Lewis spreads his wings in this production which for the first time truly
employs his talents to an international audience in a story that juxtaposes his love
for life, women and country and the complications that arise between politics, change,
revolution and expressing one's self as a writer while making a living at another trade,
in this case : brain surgery. One can imagine Mr. Kaufman's desk covered with book
options through the years & muttering to his producers cliches' such as, 'It's not rocket
science.' or 'It doesn't take a brain Surgeon.' But for Kaufman it definitely is rocket
science & as far as this writer is concerned, it is brain surgery, for Kaufman is a genius.
I never use the word and yet there it is on the page. There is something about his films
that generate a certain amount of passion, interest and bon vivant. His take on life is
liberated, his characters are on the edge of history, pushing the envelope into a new
time & place. Sam Shepard' s characterization of astronaut Chuck Yeager in the
Right Stuff is a perfect example. Characters who break boundaries and later seem to
go uncredited or under the radar. Or bringing to life the triangular love relationship
between Henry Miller and his lovers. Source material that few directors would know
how to approach, let alone, how to raise the funds for and bring to life on the screen.
Unbearable Lightness of Being also visits this type of triangular passion and complicated
relationship that make for great drama. Kaufman's take on life, love & history are dramatic,
but laced with a pathos, irony and humor that keeps one interested through out. He has
a rare viewpoint that illustrates life's issues and relationships in an original & complicated
way. With stellar performances by Lena Olin and a fresh faced newcomer on the scene,
Juliet Binoche. Supporting cast includes Stellan Skarsgard. This erotic, yet human feature
film takes us inside Czekloslavakia during a particularly tumultuous time in their history
with an oppressive an invasive Russian takeover during the nineteen sixties. Politics, passion
and provocation abound. Kaufman's films almost never come in at the usual commercial
time of ninety minutes. He is an artist, most of his features are two hours or more.
Unbearable Lightness of Being comes in at an epic 172 minutes, just under three hours.
Every scene, every line, every moment is fresh, alive, undeniably truthful, unabashedly
human & heartbreakingly real. Originally a part of the Orion Pictures catalogue. Produced
by The Saul Zaentz Company. A brave and bold historical film well worth celebrating.
This has been an appreciation of UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING on the 25 year
Anniversary. An ongoing Series of articles marking the Films, Books & Artworks that
are worth remembering, re-watching, re-reading and re-celebrating time & time again.
by Joshua A. TRILIEGI Exclusively for http://www.BUREAUofARTSandCULTURE.com