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In the movie Do the Right Thing, director Spike Lee incorporated a controversial take on what race and racism were in 1989. This movie quickly gained traction because of its unique interpretation of racism in America that the Hollywood realm of films had not yet dove into at that time. Although the film has a serious tone, it includes several philosophical topics, such as police brutality and racial bias. With these messages included in the scenes, the Spike Lee film reflects on the sociopolitical…
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Analysis Do The Right Thing In the film Do The Right Thing by Spike Lee there was plenty of things said about acts of racism that are still going on in today’s world that we live in. After watching the film I understood that Spike Lee wanted the film Do The Right Thing have a extremely deep message. In the film there are various elements that I noticed conveyed this message extremely powerful some examples would be the cinematography and cultural implications. The cinematography in Do The Right Thing…
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During the 1980s, an empowered new generation of Black youth began to interpret the civil rights movement in a different, more direct way, far removed from the "I Have a Dream" Idealism of the 1960s. This movement was pioneered by Spike Lee's film Do the Right Thing, and the civil rights themed song Fight the Power composed by Public Enemy. In the Fight the Power music video, which was also directed by Spike Lee, Chuck D denounces the marches and speeches of the 60’s and calls for more radical action…
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Do The Right Thing has the power to transform political sensibilities Because it helps one understand that although in our society there might be racism, unequal treatment, and class segregation, One should strive for change and bring balance within us all. Through the film, racism was a major problem within the community. The African Americans and Italians seemed to always to try to prove which the superior race was. Because of race, there was a disconnection in the neighborhood. Minorities…
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The African American quest for the American dream has been a hard and long drawn out one. African Americans has suffered from segregation, slavery, civil rights movement and so much more, even in today's society we as an African American people are still on the quest for the true American dream. The American dream has been a dream for many centuries, the dream of being equal and everyone having all equal opportunities, the dream to have the white picket fence and the cute little puppy, the dream…
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Spike Lee has always been one of the many directors who in always wanted to keep his or her audience socially aware. Spike Lee is an American filmmaker, producer, writer, and actor. He is most known for his films such as: Malcolm X, She’s Gotta Have It, Do the Right Thing and School Daze which made Lee famous, making him one of the most, if not the most, important Black filmmakers of today. Spike Lee was born Shelton Jackson Lee on March 20, 1957, in Atlanta, Georgia. At a very young age, he moved…
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Malcolm X The Malcolm X film by Spike Lee was a great dramatic bibliography. In this film it goes through how Malcolm lived his life until the day he died. The movie starts from Malcolm's early years as a hustler and hanging out with White people, to becoming one of the most powerful African American leaders in history. The movie shows how one person can affect so many lives and how one person can change so many things. All though the way Malcolm viewed things was not always in a positive way he…
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Spike Lee's film Bamboozled (2000), cinematically stages American mass entertainment's history of discrimination with humiliating minstrel stereotypes which was first brought to film in 1915 by D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation. Blackface' minstrelsy is a disturbing legacy that began as a tradition in the early 1800s on stage, with white actors using burnt corks to darken their skin and "allowing them to portray African-American slaves, usually as lazy, child-like providers of comic relief"…
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FROM SHEETS TO SUITS Embedded Racism in American Society By John Parker DEDICATION This book is dedicated to everybody whose mind is open enough for a vision of racial and cultural change. To those young people who are on the front line in the battle against racism, from Ferguson, and coast to coast in the United States. These young people have the leadership and courage to stand up, protest, and show civil disobedience in the fight against this disease that has poisoned and continues to infest…
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Racism in Film Throughout the history of film in the United States, the depiction of race has only changed slightly. Although, the display of various races in film is pertinent to the specific time period in which the film was made, films have, for the most part, always portrayed white superiority over other races. People of color have traditionally been presented in a negative way (if presented at all) that helps to maintain the status quo where whites are at the top of the social hierarchy. A…
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