Do the Right Thing Comments

  • Sylvan 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    Ingeniously integrate the classical script structure into the ironic style of the streets of Brooklyn, discussing sharp social issues, so real that even the audience can smell the smell of the streets; John Turturro's role in loving black culture but discriminating against African descent in his heart is still there today It is a terrible life model; the film only nominated one white man for the best actor at the Oscars that year—perhaps this is the biggest irony of American...

  • Maud 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    Spike Lee's subjective wide-angle lens is really good, and I started using it so early. (See the paragraph in the mirror in the 25th hour.) The black area is actually not as dangerous as imagined. Everything happens for a reason. In fact, the integration of races is proceeding quietly, but the process is really difficult [2019.06 29...

  • Floy 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    Wonderful! excellent work! What surrounds the black people in Brooklyn is not the daily routine work but the idle and non-stop radio and radio noise. The Italians in the pizzeria are reliant and bored with their customers, just as they are constantly in the music. The emphasized "struggle with power" is nothing but meaningless noise that is repeated repeatedly. Spike Lee’s venting is exactly the same as the events of the past few days. They hurt the...

  • Emmie 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    The climax in the next 30 minutes is very exciting. In fact, black people should also think about why they are always at the bottom of society and why society always rejects them. I think their own reasons are...

  • Wendy 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    A group of people who don’t read books, get drunk and go crazy, and then they take to the street when they are 20 years old and ask "Why don't you give me a...

  • Jaylon 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    Spike Lee’s "The Devil Is Coming" was only in his early thirties, and it was more profound than the future "Car Crash" and "Twelve Years of Being a Slave". Contrasting with the "Hibernation" of the King Ceylon and his wife, this is a good-looking story. Tuberculosis tablets. I don't think the position is "neutral." He criticizes his fellow black brothers...

  • Maiya 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    Angry black people, low-intellectual white people, grumpy sons, neutral old men, violent police officers, helpless fathers, weak Asians...a conflict in which no one can escape...

  • Gus 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    This week is my Spike Week, and I think it’s amazing everywhere. I might be a little fascinated by this little man in his 30s and 16 years old (the short Wenqing in New York, what a wonderful group). This physical response is too exciting. The first four-fifths of it is pure heat, scorching heat, and intense heat. Audiovisual language frequently pushes the high temperature to the edge of boiling until it reaches the boiling point in the last ten minutes. This film is like a pot of hot water on...

  • Eddie 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    Ukiyo-e in the black neighborhood of Brooklyn in the hot summer + irresistible racial conflict + irreversible discrimination quagmire. 1. The play is extremely exquisite, combining classic design and small plot mode. The first two acts have multiple clues and multiple characters scattered narratives, and the third act is the fuse of all the characters' fate. The characterization is more lifelike, three-dimensional and credible. 2. The film perfectly combines the sense of comedy in trivial...

  • Candice 2021-12-08 08:01:50

    Ukiyo-e and bizarre group portraits of people in black neighborhoods are depicted in only one day's time scale. And Spike Lee, as a black director, showed quite a lot of introspection in Do As It Should Be—The reason why black people are treated unfairly is not just because of racial discrimination, but because of their own public order, good customs, and social consensus. Blind rebellion and self-cultivation. For example, Buggin' Out asked the pizzeria owner to put black photos on the wall,...

Extended Reading

Do the Right Thing quotes

  • Pino: Me and you are gonna have a talk.

    Vito: Says who?

    Pino: Says who?

    Vito: Says who?

    Pino: Says me.

    Vito: Who are you?

  • Radio Raheem: Peace, y'all.

    Ella: Peace, Radio Raheem.

    Cee: Peace, man.

    Ahmad: You the man. I'm just visitin'.

    Punchy: It's your world...

    Cee: For real, in a big muthafuckin' way.

    Ahmad: Yo, that boy's livin' very large!

    Punchy: He even *walks* in stereo.