Sal (Danny Aiello) is a middle-aged pizzaiolo who prides himself upon his restaurant’s place as the heart of the neighborhood and for his strong Italian American heritage. Like many diners across America, the pizzeria has a Wall of Fame, but Sal refuses to allow anyone other than bona-fide Italian actors like De Niro and Pacino on his wall. This irks Mookie’s firebrand friend Buggin’ Out (Giancarlo Esposito), who demands to see some “brothers” on the wall. Mookie and his friends are sneered at by Sal’s son Pino (John Turturro), who makes no attempt to hide his prejudices, and quietly supported by the more open-minded Vito (Richard Edson). Sal himself straddles the line between tolerance and racism – when calm he defends his exclusively black clientele, but when enraged he spews forth a torrent of epithets and intolerance. There is one particularly memorable episode in which Mookie’s black sister Jade (Joie Lee) enters the pizzeria and is treated to Sal’s fawning affection. The camera cuts and zooms as if in a kung fu action movie to reveal both Mookie and Pino’s eyes narrowed.
Across the street sit three men (Paul Benjamin, Frankie Faison, and Robin Harris) who drink, tell each other their plans for opening a store, and embark upon angry tirades against the successful Korean grocer (Steve Park) adjacent to them. A young mentally impaired man named Smiley (Roger Guenveur Smith) hocks photos of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X. He’s joined in marching back and forth up and down the block by Radio Raheem (Bill Nunn), who refuses to blast anything but “Fight the Power” by Public Enemy. There’s a great scene that purposefully evokes Robert Mitchum’s serial killer in The Night of the Hunter, in which Radio Raheem tells us the ol’ story of right hand, left hand – his brass knuckles labelled ‘love’ and ‘hate’. The film is also notable for the screen debut of Rosie Perez, who plays Mookie’s screechy Latino girlfriend Tina – who’s also the mother of his child.
By my count, that’s sixteen major characters. Lee’s film could be like so many others that attempts to tackle the issue of race – lesser entries that, quite often by accident, vilify whites as a whole, or worse still overemphasize their contributions to the civil rights movement by centering the story around a “just white man who sees the evils of society” instead of the triumphs and struggles of the victimized themselves. There are no villains in Do the Right Thing, but there aren’t any heroes either.
The much-discussed and highly controversial finale is an absolute tour de force in filmmaking. Each shot is perfectly placed, each rhythm perfectly paced. There are three major movements in the climax. The first is an assault on culture, the second on humanity, the third on loyalty. There are some who claim the ending is “troubling,” and that Lee rationalizes racial violence with Do the Right Thing. If even for one second you could be misguided enough to think so, one look at Ruby Dee’s tear-trodden face will tell you you’re supposed to be crying, too.
Spike Lee’s direction across the film is heavily stylized and delightfully fresh, even after twenty-three years’ status as a classic. One is reminded of Orson Welles and his landmark masterpiece Citizen Kane – both Welles and Lee wrote, directed, and starred in their films, and both were fond of canted angles. Where Lee succeeds the most, though, is in tapping into the feel of this time and this place. The sticky, soppy weather permeates our own pores over the course of the film, largely thanks to the vibrant color scheme of the production design. When the block’s residents unleash a fire hydrant on the city streets, the joy is palatable and contagious.
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When the 1989 Academy Awards rolled around, Do the Right Thing received only two nominations – Best Original Screenplay for Lee and Best Supporting Actor for Danny Aiello – despite the film topping numerous critics’ Top 10 lists, including Roger Ebert’s and Gene Siskel’s. There were many who claimed foul, and even some who suggested that bigotry could be the culprit. Worse still were headlines and reviews suggesting black audiences would riot upon seeing the film. In the years since, the heat surrounding the film has largely subsided. I think we can all still learn from the film’s immortal message, delivered by, of all characters, one named Mister Señor Love Daddy. “Yo! Hold up! Time out! Y’all take a chill! Ya need to cool that shit out! And that’s the double truth, Ruth!”
FINAL GRADE: ★★★★★★★★★★ (10/10 stars)
FINAL SAY: Do the Right Thing is quite possibly the best film about racism ever made – the rare film that’s timeless and topical, entertaining and blistering, and completely unforgettable.
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