BlacKkKlansman Comments

  • Thora 2022-04-20 09:01:33

    It feels like it's just to make a comedy or even a farce, and let the two undercover agents insist on changing their identities. I originally expected the black students to make some big news at the same time, so that the cross-cutting of the two lines would be more thorough and exciting, but doing that. It's not so "the right times" for Spike Lee, after all, this is the Trump era of "making America great again". The ending is a little weird to be serious, but the fact that it ended up with the...

  • Deondre 2022-03-22 09:01:34

    very exciting. The original sin of the police and the original sin of the movie are mirrored. Ron is Spike Lee's self-comparison. The question of this film is: Can a little change be made in the system of crime-ridden movies? The footage at the end is well used, not the director's show, but Ron and Patrice seeing it through a corridor of...

  • Jimmie 2022-03-22 09:01:34

    Facing the complexity that was avoided by "Escape from the Dead", the difficulty of reconciliation that was downgraded by "Green Book", the division, the radicalism, and the injustice. Due to the knowledge, I don't know much about many points, but it's cool. This is a modern film created by the modern context, the concept of film history and the sense of mission. From the protagonist opening the door, the montage at the end states: 1. The above is a movie, the next is not. (Intentionally...

  • Carli 2022-03-22 09:01:34

    Announcing, venting, and sarcasm, the film is full of dense emotions, and Spike Lee's so-called restraint seems so futile, so much of the subject matter itself that could be further explored is completely shelved; finally, the real news image makes the whole film. The impact of the movie has suddenly increased by several levels, but then again, what am I doing watching...

  • Berniece 2022-03-22 09:01:34

    The previous ones converged to the end and still burst out. After passing through time and reality, they are still bloody status quo...

  • Delphine 2022-03-22 09:01:34

    One hundred years ago, they put on pointed masks and lynched black teenagers. One hundred years later, they held up tiki torches and drove cars to innocent people. Take off the hexagram, get the membership card, speak with the leader in a white accent. Behind the black-and-white double-reed mission, the blood of people of color, the fire of extremists, the explosives that cannot be put in the mailbox, and the cross that threatens demonstrations, will all be accompanied by narrow emotions and...

  • Aida 2022-03-22 09:01:34

    The director's control is very strong, the editing and scheduling are top-notch, the atmosphere, scenes, and characters are in retro style. The black girls' explosive heads and round-rimmed glasses are so beautiful. The overall fine and nostalgic workmanship is like watching an old movie in the 60s. Line advancement, parallel montage, a little tension in the humor, but not sloppy, the rhythm is just right, the 3k party gathers to watch "The Birth of a Nation", black college students listen to...

  • Pedro 2022-03-22 09:01:34

    Why can't art speak for politics? In comparison, I think this perspective is more valuable to wrap a piece of history in a playful genre film. In their respective radical camps, a black person and a group of white people have completed their mission. The disguised identity on the phone forms a stark contrast between the conversation with the KKK and getting along with colleagues in the police station, where the level of personality is...

  • Sylvia 2022-03-21 09:01:39

    It tells the story of the never-ending class struggle in a playful way, rooted in a long history, and spread to today's social status and political context. Both extremes are on the verge of breaking. The montage echoes at the beginning, which not only has a comic effect, but also is very tense in the dramatic performance; the comedy factor is very attractive, the script setting is also clever, and the insertion of news materials at the end seems deliberately...

  • Monica 2022-03-21 09:01:39

    This time, Spike Lee didn't use a bitter black perspective to talk about racial discrimination, but made fun of that history in a rather entertaining way. The parallel editing in the middle of "The Birth of a Nation" is quite wonderful. , The arrest of a black police detective while performing a mission seems funny now, but it is actually a true portrayal of racism. News images have brought people back to reality, and anti-discrimination still has a long way to...

Extended Reading

BlacKkKlansman quotes

  • Mr. Turrentine: Sheeeeeeee-it!

  • Patrice Dumas: You jive turkey.

    Ron Stallworth: Who you callin' jive turkey? Jive?

    Patrice Dumas: I'm callin' *you* a jive turkey!