Do The Right Thing - a wake-up call
- Dylan Valley
The Conversation - Africa asks Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝ filmmaker about the film that has influenced him the most: Spike Lee’s “Do The Right Thing”
In our new weekly series, âUnder the influenceâ, we ask experts to share what they believe are the most influential works of art or artists in their field. Here, University of the Witwatersrand film studies lecturer and filmmaker Dylan Valley explains why Spike Leeâs âDo The Right Thingâ is one of the directorâs most influential films.
For a black film and media student at the University of Cape Town, Spike Leeâs âDo The Right Thingâ (1989) was a revelation. I watched it on a DVD one afternoon with my friend Frank in one of the damp tutorial rooms in the Arts Block on Upper Campus, only a few steps away from where Cecil John Rhodesâ statue stood.
Our film history curriculum at that point had been mostly European and American cinema. While still American, this was something completely different. It had been nearly 20 years since the filmâs inception and it took place on a completely different continent, and yet it was so relatable.
More than just that, it was a visceral film experience, a wake-up call, but also an affirmation. Watching it in 2016 itâs eerie (and tragic) how relevant its central theme of racial tension and structural violence still is, both in America and South Africa.
âDo The Right Thingâ takes place over the course of the hottest day on a block in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. Spike Lee plays Mookie, a 25-year-old who seems to be meandering through life, but is on a mission to get paid. He works at the local Italian pizzeria, Salâs, where most of the neighbourhood eats and hangs out.
The simmering heat of the day (visualised by deep reds and yellows on screen) reflects the tensions between the Italian pizzeria owner, Sal (Danny Aiello) and Bugginâ Out (Giancarlo Esposito), the self-appointed neighbourhood spokesperson. Bugginâ Out questions the lack of representation of black people on the walls of the pizzeria, which services a mostly black clientele: âSal, how come you ainât got no brothers on the wall?â
Salâs hostile response to Bugginâ Outâs provocation leads to a protest that ends in police brutality and the loss of black life, and marks the demise of the pizzeria.
Why is/was it influential?
Despite its explosive dĂŠnouement, one of the main strengths of the film is the complexity of its characters and the representations of blackness on screen. Lee moved beyond stereotypes of African Americans in cinema and created characters reflected in the everyday. In âDo The Right Thingâ, black people are not presented in the traditional binary of subservient and smiling, or violent and dangerous, but rather are able to exist as more rounded expressions of themselves.
While Bugginâ Out is concerned with black nationalist politics and representation, he also bugs out when a white gentrifier on the block accidentally scuffs his brand new US$100 Jordan sneakers. Even though this infliction is frivolous, it leads to a cathartic (prophetic?) outburst: âMan motherfuck gentrification!â
No one in âDo The Right Thingâ is necessarily âheroicâ. Even Radio Raheem, the likeable, stylish giant who blasts the filmâs opening theme and leitmotif, hip-hop group âs Fight The Power, from a large boombox, imposes his music on others. He is mostly an irritant in the neighbourhood. Radio Raheem is unnecessarily confrontational with the Korean shopkeepers who have recently moved onto the block. Itâs reflected in the scene where he goes to them to buy batteries, âI said 20 âDâ batteries, motherfucker! Learn how to speak English first, alright?â
Although in the same scene, he smiles and tells shopkeeper Sonny (Steve Park), âYouâre alright, manâ, diffusing any threat of real conflict.
Mookie isnât necessarily noble or likeable, however his actions towards the end of the film disrupt this reading of him and show significant character development. Ironically, there is not that much black and white in this film; the characters live in a world of greys.
While the film has no typical heroes, it is more clear about its villains, particularly the police. Also there is pizzeria owner Salâs son Pino (John Turturro) who is openly racist and tells Sal, âIâm sick of niggers.â Sal is more complicated, as he sees himself as a good guy who takes pride in feeding the neighbourhood.
Sal later tells Mookie he sees him as âsonâ. Despite this, during the filmâs climax and in the verbal screaming match between him and Bugginâ Out, he flips and uses racial epithets, telling Radio Raheem to turn off that âjungle musicâ and hurls profanities like ânigger mutherfuckerâ.
In his book, ââ, Ed Guerrero points out that it is Sal who destroys Raheemâs boombox with a bat: âA line is crossed here, from words to physical action.â When that violence escalates and turns fatal, the victim doesnât need to be an angel for us to have tears in our eyes. He was real, we knew him.
âDo The Right Thingâ was partly inspired by the in which a black man, Michael Griffiths, was killed while escaping an angry white mob with baseball bats after exiting the New Park pizzeria. The mob had earlier tried to chase him and his friends out of their neighbourhood for being black. Unsurprisingly, this was only one of the stories that Lee drew from to write âDo The Right Thingâ. This story is sadly familiar nearly 30 years later.
Why is it still relevant today?
In 2016, amidst the #BlackLivesMatter , and a never-ending list of unarmed African Americans being , the film is even more relevant. In 2015, young black men were more likely to be killed at the hands of police than other Americans, and 2016 looks to be on par. In a South Africa where the police killed 34 miners in for striking for a better life, and where the politics of representation and ownership are still unresolved, the tragic trajectory of âDo The Right Thingâ will send chills down your spine.
When the film was released, journalists feared it would and hate crimes. There were even warnings issued to white people to avoid seeing the film. Instead, it caused a nation to reflect, and affirmed the black experience around the world. Despite critical and fan acclaim, the film was mostly snubbed by the Academy Awards in 1990, receiving for Best Writing and Best Supporting Actor (Danny Aiello).
Tellingly, went to âDriving Miss Daisyâ, which Ed Guerrero calls
the paternalist problem picture with its long-suffering black servant ⌠The contrasts between Morgan Freemanâs rendering of an elderly, humble and enduring Negro servant in âDriving Miss Daisyâ and Spike Leeâs portrayal of the feckless, urban youth Mookie could not have been greater in the 1989 Oscar year.
Last year Lee finally won his Oscar at the Academyâs annual , an honorary nod for his contribution to cinema.
Filmically, there is so much more to be said of âDo The Right Thingâ: its beautiful cinematography, itâs on-point casting (Rosie Perezâs debut as Tina, and Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee as an elderly couple) and its belligerent dialogue (âIâm just a struggling black man trying to keep his dick hard in a cruel and harsh world!â).
The film often breaks the ââ â the imaginary âwallâ that exists between actors and the audience â making us aware of its construction, like in Raheemâs dreamlike love/hate soliloquy and the racial hatred montage.
Watching it all these years later, perhaps whatâs most impressive is how fresh the film still feels, even down to the classic hip-hop and âAfro-centricâ clothes and haircuts (there are many Bugginâ Outs walking the streets of my home city of Johannesburg as we speak).
âDo The Right Thingâ was a challenge to Hollywoodâs cultural hegemony. Lee fought to get the story told on his terms, exchanging larger financial support for his artistic vision.
Most importantly, the film doesnât offer neat answers, but rather important questions, which havenât lost any of their urgency today. As a filmmaker, one can only hope to create work with such long-lasting affect.![]()
, Lecturer of Film & Media Studies, . This article was originally published on . Read the .