Eighteen years later, he is still the freshest, most incendiary and most accomplished black filmmaker we have. He had and has peers, of course—brilliant peers like Keenen Ivory Wayans, Charles Burnett, Mario Van Peebles, Warrington and Reggie Hudlin, Julie Dash, and more recently John Singleton and Antoine Fuqua. But none has the instant, far-flung and lightning-rod name recognition of Spike Lee, and none has ascended to the stratosphere of American directors or actors the way he has. (Make of them what you will, but the comparisons to Martin Scorsese and Woody Allen are countless, and I'm thinking, of course, of his frequent collaborations with Denzel Washington, one of the genuinely versatile actors of our time.)
Now, Spike would say that he was in the right place at the right time and that, say, Oscar Micheaux and Melvin van Peebles weren’t. There may be some truth in this, I suppose, and his modesty is commendable. But I'd like to put out there that Spike Lee is “Spike Lee” because of his films—the rich textures that are like paintings, the color palettes that themselves tell stories, the performances that he elicits from actors across race and gender, and the musical scores that are not background or accompaniment but fully fleshed-out characters.
Spike is a third-generation Morehouse Man, raised among artists and educators. For him, black life isn't despairing and pathologized; rather, it's vital and vibrant and electrifying. Do the Right Thing may make us think like sociologists about race relations and urban life, but it also lets us in on the way black people talk to each other, live together and love each other. Spike learned how to make films at Clark Atlanta University and, famously, at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts (where he now teaches), but he learned how to look and listen long before that, within the self-contained and nurturing world his family and neighbors created in Fort Greene. His films are technically brilliant, yes, but they are also about personalities and ideas that have been observed, understood and distilled through decades of being black.
It is, quite frankly, difficult to believe that we are commemorating the 20th anniversary of Do the Right Thing and that that angry, young black cinéaste, the ebony wunderkind of the ’80s, is now middle-aged with two children in their early teens (one perhaps a future fourth-generation Morehouse Man) and has for at least a full decade been his own corporate icon, as familiar a part of the American icon establishment as Jack Nicholson, Michael Jordan or Denzel himself. I'm not sure that Do the Right Thing is his masterpiece; it may be, or perhaps his masterpiece is another of his 20 films and documentaries or even a film yet to come. (My personal favorite is She’s Gotta Have It, which Spike told me during our interview for The Root remains his most profitable film.) What I am sure of is that I do not know of another film that got people talking about race—or that still has people talking about race—in the way that this film did, and does. Mookie, Sal, Radio Raheem, Buggin Out, Tina, Da Mayor, Mother Sister, Pino and Vito, Mister Señor Love Daddy, Sonny, Sweet Dick Willie and Coconut Sid: All are indelible characters and types, with each representing a facet of Brooklyn, indeed, of American urban life, and of race, but with each saying it in his or her own peculiar way.
I love this film, and I still don't know what to make of Mookie's throwing the garbage can through the window of Sal's Famous Pizzeria. On June 30, 1989, when the film was released in the United States—three years before the Rodney King verdict set Los Angeles on fire—there was serious discussion that it would spark riots, that the anger so vividly written and acted on the screen would be realized by black viewers. The film, of course, caused no riots. But lingering anger has been directed against Spike Lee from various quarters of American society precisely because that film not only confronted the miasma of race so squarely, but also because it linked the analysis of race to class, inextricably, and did so with enormous subtlety and complexity, through the lens of Ernest Dickerson’s splendid sense of color, angle of vision and depth of field.
One thing for sure about Spike Lee: The man isn't afraid to open his mouth; I'd say he's been an equal opportunity offender throughout his remarkably productive career. But in 1989, with Do the Right Thing, he got us all talking about race and class in a fresh, new and compelling way, and that is as sure a sign of his enormous talent as a writer and a director as anything, and the ultimate sign that this film was destined to be a classic from the get-go. It's worth remembering how Vincent Canby began his review on June 30, 1989, in the New York Times: "In all of the earnest, solemn, humorless discussions about the social and political implications of Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing, an essential fact tends to be overlooked: it is one terrific movie."
And, indeed, it is. Let us be neither earnest nor solemn nor humorless as we look back to the premiere of Spike Lee’s historic, seminal and masterful film. None of us back then could possibly have imagined all that has transpired for our people, and for this country, in the intervening two decades: a black prince and princess so elegantly sitting up in the White House, and their very first date was in a movie theater in 1989, watching—what else? Do the Right Thing.
Henry Louis Gates Jr. is editor-in-chief of The Root and is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor at Harvard University
To read more of The Root's DTRT @20 Coverage, PLAY Raheem's Radio
FREE DOWNLOAD The Root’s Official DTRT@20 Party Kit
Natalie Hopkinson: Why Mookie did the wrong thing
Teresa Wiltz: Spike's Woman Problem
Dayo Olopade: First Couple’s First Flick
Mark Anthony Neal: The music in Spike’s message
Kai Wright: Still do or die in Bed-Stuy

Comments
Realizing his terrible mistake, Bruno sets out to get his baby back.
well I want to ask If anything I would say it was a "check yourself" for Black American society. The idea that someone could come along and back stroke against the swift current of rasial degridation was eye opening and doing thing right.
discount beauty products
If anything I would say it was a "check yourself" for Black American society. The idea that someone could come along and back stroke against the swift current of rasial degridation was eye opening. Respect Spike!
regards,
mario games
Some of us liked what we saw and some os us just put make-up over it and went on about our selfish ways.
Maple Story Hacks
Hoping that you will continue posting an article having a useful information. Thanks a lot!
Blogging Tips
Security
Inter Studio
Site Feeds
Web Desinger
Pixxme Blog
Home Scholl Huddle
Estesland
Beauty Blog
Ennis Enterprises
Mengembalikan jati diri bangsa
or at least one that was memorable for him. online games
I’d love to discuss discount louis vuitton, but I am not sure if you really have one.
This louie vuitton is so unique, and I never see it’s sold in the LV stores, where did you get this one please?
This louis vuitton outlet is just come out this spring show, it’s a totally new style of louis vuitton outlet, worth to buy.
Some of us liked what we saw and some os us just put make-up over it and went on about our selfish ways. If anything I would say it was a "check yourself" for Black American society. The idea that someone could come along and back stroke against the swift current of rasial degridation was eye opening. Respect Spike! keep doing the right thing.
buy cialis online
tiffanys jewelry
09 Bright And Classic Tiffany and Co
Tiffany & Co. Inlay Emerald And Diamond Bracelet
Tiffany Sets Store
Get Your Own Tiffany& Co. Tiffany Co at Affordable Price
Tiffany&Co Engraved OVAL TAG necklace
Tiffany&Co COLLAR
Tiffany&Co Knots Cuff
Tiffany&Co 5 Sevillana Bracelet
Tiffany&Co Equus bracelet
Tiffany&Co Star Link bracelet
Tiffany&Co 5 Charm Bracelet
Buy Jewelry Anyway, Why Not Select Tiffany Co
Why One Should Buy Perfect Tiffany Rings
Tiffany&Co Lock Set
Tiffany&Co 5 OPEN HEART Bracelet
Tiffany&Co Hoop earrings
Tiffany&Co Circle Earrings
Tiffany&Co Star Drop Earrings
Tiffany&Co Numeric BAR Pendant
Tiffany&Co Numeric Round Pendant
Tiffany&Co Mini Cross Pendant
Tiffany&Co Titanium Pendant
See http://tinyurl.com/healthcrime, then Do the Right Thing (whatever you feel it to be).