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Maynard 2022-03-25 09:01:09
In fact, "Les Miserables" is not far behind, whether it is multi-point narrative (room noise!), group portrayal (Nashville!), conflict composition or scene scheduling, Spike Lee is clearly better. And I don't think Raj Leigh is fully aware of violence, because in his footage immigrants are righteous rebels, and the wrong is always "sowing people." Spike Lee, on the other hand, knows exactly what to do, and there is a real dilemma behind it. From "Do What You Should" to "BlacKkKlansman," the...
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Fiona 2022-03-25 09:01:09
Don't compare "Les Miserables" with "Do It All". Both touch upon the need for violence, but the latter has a sense of ethnic introspection that the former lacks. The anxiety and suffocation of "Hot Afternoon" combined with the oblique composition (especially the climax section, where blacks and whites are in a clever contrast to the crowdedness of the frame), shows the process of everyone in the block from anxiety to ecstasy. The police only appeared for a few minutes, but they were the...
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Lilyan 2022-03-25 09:01:09
It is a prediction of the recent death of Floyd, a black American. The black man was strangled to death by the police on the spot, and the black community began to smash, smash, and loot in revenge. Sadly, it has been 30 years since the filming of this film. An hour and a half before the film is the best comedy I've seen in the last year or two. The lines are so funny and interesting. The mayor and the mother sister are in love with each other. Comedy takes a nosedive to...
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Lelia 2022-03-23 09:01:55
Said 467 f..k, and successfully predicted the "Black Lives Matter" movement in thirty years....
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Giles 2022-03-23 09:01:55
It has nothing to do with race, it has nothing to do with culture, it has nothing to do with country or East and West! All that matters is that you conform to animal nature, to a force that will overwhelm you at all times, violence! The rhythm is very similar to the "93 United Airlines" of green grass. The front is full of daily life, and the adrenaline is full in the last 20 minutes. A clear symbol, hot represents crit, cold represents calm, all hot and cold have become symbols, so Mookie...
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Braden 2022-03-23 09:01:55
8.4 Wonderful community group portrait, solid foundation and comprehensive coverage. Racial conflicts must not be summed up with just the word...
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Ashtyn 2022-03-23 09:01:55
Good movies seem to have this characteristic: they are summaries and prophecies. Intense and loud, Do What You Should Be dizzying, it uses black music, blood, and camera language to justify black films—where labels are unnecessary and important. Spike Lee depicts the vivid black neighborhoods in detail, and analyzes the obvious and implicit contradictions and conflicts between various classes and races. When the tragic cycle plays out, anger should not be the only emotion, violence should not...
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Mariano 2022-03-23 09:01:55
Essentialism and Social Constructivism. Words intensify hatred, actions incite anger. A tragic experiment with comedic...
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Nikita 2022-03-23 09:01:55
We looked at the biographies of Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm, and Spike Lee expressed the same philosophy in his own way. This is indeed one of the most wonderful black-themed works, satirizing various racist issues including black culture, very realistic, very humorous, and very cruel. A lose-lose story sparked by a photo of a black man eloquently speaks to America's...
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Roberto 2022-03-22 09:01:49
The black director filming the issue of black people, but it is rare to be calm and restrained, without the anger of black people, but observe it like a bystander. The whole film does not have absolute good people and bad people, but through the many details on this block of less than 100 meters, To explore the root of the tragedy, at the same time, you can't make comments from any character empathy, so you will be limited by self-formation prejudice, it may be the most profound black...
Do the Right Thing Comments
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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?
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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.
Director: Spike Lee
Language: English,Italian,Spanish,Korean Release date: July 21, 1989